Published June 5, 2009 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Pervasive Natural Selection in the Drosophila Genome?

  • 1. Hebrew University
  • 2. Stanford University
  • 3. University of Chicago
  • 4. Princeton University

Description

Over the past four decades, the predominant view of molecular evolution saw little connection between natural selection and genome evolution, assuming that the functionally constrained fraction of the genome is relatively small and that adaptation is sufficiently infrequent to play little role in shaping patterns of variation within and even between species. Recent evidence from Drosophila, reviewed here, suggests that this view may be invalid. Analyses of genetic variation within and between species reveal that much of the Drosophila genome is under purifying selection, and thus of functional importance, and that a large fraction of coding and noncoding differences between species are adaptive. The findings further indicate that, in Drosophila, adaptations may be both common and strong enough that the fate of neutral mutations depends on their chance linkage to adaptive mutations as much as on the vagaries of genetic drift. The emerging evidence has implications for a wide variety of fields, from conservation genetics to bioinformatics, and presents challenges to modelers and experimentalists alike.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1000495
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:8239

Funding

ISF
1435/07
Flegg
felowship
National Institutes of Health
GM077368
National Institutes of Health
HG002568-07
National Institutes of Health
GM72861
Genetics Society of America
Rosalind Franklin Young Investigator Award

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Human Genetics