Give and take: Effects of genetic admixture on mutation load in endangered Florida panthers

Author:

Ochoa Alexander1ORCID,Onorato David P2ORCID,Roelke-Parker Melody E3ORCID,Culver Melanie4ORCID,Fitak Robert R1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and Genomics and Bioinformatics Cluster, University of Central Florida , Orlando, FL 32816 , USA

2. Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission , Naples, FL 34114 , USA

3. Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc. , Fredrick, MD 21701 , USA

4. U.S. Geological Survey, Arizona Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, and School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona , Tucson, AZ 85721 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Genetic admixture is a biological event inherent to genetic rescue programs aimed at the long-term conservation of endangered wildlife. Although the success of such programs can be measured by the increase in genetic diversity and fitness of subsequent admixed individuals, predictions supporting admixture costs to fitness due to the introduction of novel deleterious alleles are necessary. Here, we analyzed nonsynonymous variation from conserved genes to quantify and compare levels of mutation load (i.e. proportion of deleterious alleles and genotypes carrying these alleles) among endangered Florida panthers and non-endangered Texas pumas. Specifically, we used canonical (i.e. non-admixed) Florida panthers, Texas pumas, and F1 (canonical Florida × Texas) panthers dating from a genetic rescue program and Everglades National Park panthers with Central American ancestry resulting from an earlier admixture event. We found neither genetic drift nor selection significantly reduced overall proportions of deleterious alleles in the severely bottlenecked canonical Florida panthers. Nevertheless, the deleterious alleles identified were distributed into a disproportionately high number of homozygous genotypes due to close inbreeding in this group. Conversely, admixed Florida panthers (either with Texas or Central American ancestry) presented reduced levels of homozygous genotypes carrying deleterious alleles but increased levels of heterozygous genotypes carrying these variants relative to canonical Florida panthers. Although admixture is likely to alleviate the load of standing deleterious variation present in homozygous genotypes, our results suggest that introduced novel deleterious alleles (temporarily present in heterozygous state) in genetically rescued populations could potentially be expressed in subsequent generations if their effective sizes remain small.

Funder

University of Central Florida

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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