Maintenance of Adaptive Dynamics and No Detectable Load in a Range-Edge Outcrossing Plant Population

Author:

Takou Margarita1ORCID,Hämälä Tuomas2,Koch Evan M3ORCID,Steige Kim A1,Dittberner Hannes1,Yant Levi4,Genete Mathieu5,Sunyaev Shamil3,Castric Vincent5,Vekemans Xavier5,Savolainen Outi6,Meaux Juliette de1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Botany, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany

2. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA

3. Department of Biomedical Informatics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

4. School of Life Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom

5. CNRS, UMR 8198 – Evo-Eco-Paleo, University of Lille, Lille, France

6. Department of Ecology and Genetics, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland

Abstract

Abstract During range expansion, edge populations are expected to face increased genetic drift, which in turn can alter and potentially compromise adaptive dynamics, preventing the removal of deleterious mutations and slowing down adaptation. Here, we contrast populations of the European subspecies Arabidopsis lyrata ssp. petraea, which expanded its Northern range after the last glaciation. We document a sharp decline in effective population size in the range-edge population and observe that nonsynonymous variants segregate at higher frequencies. We detect a 4.9% excess of derived nonsynonymous variants per individual in the range-edge population, suggesting an increase of the genomic burden of deleterious mutations. Inference of the fitness effects of mutations and modeling of allele frequencies under the explicit demographic history of each population predicts a depletion of rare deleterious variants in the range-edge population, but an enrichment for fixed ones, consistent with the bottleneck effect. However, the demographic history of the range-edge population predicts a small net decrease in per-individual fitness. Consistent with this prediction, the range-edge population is not impaired in its growth and survival measured in a common garden experiment. We further observe that the allelic diversity at the self-incompatibility locus, which ensures strict outcrossing and evolves under negative frequency-dependent selection, has remained unchanged. Genomic footprints indicative of selective sweeps are broader in the Northern population but not less frequent. We conclude that the outcrossing species A. lyrata ssp. petraea shows a strong resilience to the effect of range expansion.

Funder

ERC

Adaptoscope

Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

European Fund for Regional Economic Development for their financial support

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference138 articles.

1. Fast model-based estimation of ancestry in unrelated individuals;Alexander;Genome Res,2009

2. Population structure and historical biogeography of European Arabidopsis lyrata;Ansell;Heredity,2010

3. Self-compatibility and establishment after “long-distance”;Baker;Dispersal,1955

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