Abstract

Understanding the relative role of different evolutionary forces in shaping the level and distribution of functional genetic diversity among natural populations is a key issue in evolutionary and conservation biology. To do so accurately genetic data must be analysed in conjunction with an unambiguous understanding of the historical processes that have acted upon the populations. Here, we focused on diversity at toll‐like receptor (TLR) loci, which play a key role in the vertebrate innate immune system and, therefore, are expected to be under pathogen‐mediated selection. We assessed TLR variation within and among 13 island populations (grouped into three archipelagos) of Berthelot's pipit, Anthus berthelotii, for which detailed population history has previously been ascertained. We also compared the variation observed with that found in its widespread sister species, the tawny pipit, Anthus campestris. We found strong evidence for positive selection at specific codons in TLR1LA, TLR3 and TLR4. Despite this, we found that at the allele frequency level, demographic history has played the major role in shaping patterns of TLR variation in Berthelot's pipit. Levels of diversity and differentiation within and across archipelagos at all TLR loci corresponded very closely with neutral microsatellite variation and with the severity of the bottlenecks that occurred during colonization. Our study shows that despite the importance of TLRs in combating pathogens, demography can be the main driver of immune gene variation within and across populations, resulting in patterns of functional variation that can persist over evolutionary timescales.

Highlights

  • Genetic variation provides the fundamental substrate for evolution

  • The highest levels of functional variation were observed at TLR3 and TLR4, so an additional 25 individuals per population were screened at these loci to ensure we detected all functional variants

  • Twelve tawny pipits were all screened at all five toll-like receptor (TLR) loci

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic variation provides the fundamental substrate for evolution. understanding the levels and distribution of functional genetic diversity among individuals and populations, and what forces drive these patterns, is a central component of evolutionary biology. Population bottlenecks result in losses of functional genetic diversity (Cabe 1998; Gautschi et al 2002; Sutton et al 2013) and are a key force in shaping the future evolution and persistence of populations (Frankham 1996; England et al 2003). Genetic diversity will be maintained within the bottlenecked populations, reducing the amount of differentiation one might expect under drift alone (Hedrick & Thomson 1983; Hughes & Nei 1988), at least at the specific loci involved. Under purifying or constant directional selection, genetic diversity will be reduced and the effects of drift, and resulting population differentiation, will be reinforced (Jiggins & Hurst 2003; Winternitz & Wares 2013)

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