Genome Wide Analyses Reveal Little Evidence for Adaptive Evolution in Many Plant Species
Author(s) -
Toni I. Gossmann,
BaoHua Song,
Aaron J. Windsor,
Thomas MitchellOlds,
Christopher J. Dixon,
Maxim V. Kapralov,
Dmitry A. Filatov,
Adam EyreWalker
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/msq079
Subject(s) - biology , adaptive evolution , evolutionary biology , effective population size , genetic fitness , population , genome , plant evolution , adaptation (eye) , genetics , neutral theory of molecular evolution , genome size , biological evolution , genetic variation , gene , demography , neuroscience , sociology
The relative contribution of advantageous and neutral mutations to the evolutionary process is a central problem in evolutionary biology. Current estimates suggest that whereas Drosophila, mice, and bacteria have undergone extensive adaptive evolution, hominids show little or no evidence of adaptive evolution in protein-coding sequences. This may be a consequence of differences in effective population size. To study the matter further, we have investigated whether plants show evidence of adaptive evolution using an extension of the McDonald-Kreitman test that explicitly models slightly deleterious mutations by estimating the distribution of fitness effects of new mutations. We apply this method to data from nine pairs of species. Altogether more than 2,400 loci with an average length of approximately 280 nucleotides were analyzed. We observe very similar results in all species; we find little evidence of adaptive amino acid substitution in any comparison except sunflowers. This may be because many plant species have modest effective population sizes.
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