Greater strength of selection and higher proportion of beneficial amino acid changing mutations in humans compared with mice and Drosophila melanogaster

  1. Kirk E. Lohmueller1,7
  1. 1Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA;
  2. 2Zhejiang Provincial Laboratory of Life Sciences and Biomedicine, Key Laboratory of Structural Biology of Zhejiang Province, School of Life Sciences, Westlake University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310024, China;
  3. 3Institute of Biology, Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310024, China;
  4. 4School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia 5005, Australia;
  5. 5Program in Genetics and Genome Biology and The Centre for Applied Genomics, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 0A4, Canada;
  6. 6Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3LB, United Kingdom;
  7. 7Department of Human Genetics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA
  • Corresponding authors: klohmueller{at}ucla.edu, zhenying{at}westlake.edu.cn
  • Abstract

    Quantifying and comparing the amount of adaptive evolution among different species is key to understanding how evolution works. Previous studies have shown differences in adaptive evolution across species; however, their specific causes remain elusive. Here, we use improved modeling of weakly deleterious mutations and the demographic history of the outgroup species and ancestral population and estimate that at least 20% of nonsynonymous substitutions between humans and an outgroup species were fixed by positive selection. This estimate is much higher than previous estimates, which did not correct for the sizes of the outgroup species and ancestral population. Next, we jointly estimate the proportion and selection coefficient (p+ and s+, respectively) of newly arising beneficial nonsynonymous mutations in humans, mice, and Drosophila melanogaster by examining patterns of polymorphism and divergence. We develop a novel composite likelihood framework to test whether these parameters differ across species. Overall, we reject a model with the same p+ and s+ of beneficial mutations across species and estimate that humans have a higher p+s+ compared with that of D. melanogaster and mice. We show that this result cannot be caused by biased gene conversion or hypermutable CpG sites. We discuss possible biological explanations that could generate the observed differences in the amount of adaptive evolution across species.

    Footnotes

    • Received August 31, 2019.
    • Accepted November 10, 2020.

    This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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