Abstract

Genetic diversity is maintained by continuing generation and removal of variants. While examining over 800,000 DNA variants in wild isolates of Caenorhabditis elegans, we made a discovery that the proportions of variant types are not constant across the C. elegans genome. The variant proportion is defined as the fraction of a specific variant type (e.g. single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) or indel) within a broader set of variants (e.g. all variants or all non-SNPs). The proportions of most variant types show a correlation with the recombination rate. These correlations can be explained as a result of a concerted action of two mutation mechanisms, which we named Morgan and Sanger mechanisms. The two proposed mechanisms act according to the distinct components of the recombination rate, specifically the genetic and physical distance. Regression analysis was used to explore the characteristics and contributions of the two mutation mechanisms. According to our model, ~20–40% of all mutations in C. elegans wild populations are derived from programmed meiotic double strand breaks, which precede chromosomal crossovers and thus may be the point of origin for the Morgan mechanism. A substantial part of the known correlation between the recombination rate and variant distribution appears to be caused by the mutations generated by the Morgan mechanism. Mathematically integrating the mutation model with background selection model gives a more complete depiction of how the variant landscape is shaped in C. elegans. Similar analysis should be possible in other species by examining the correlation between the recombination rate and variant landscape within the context of our mutation model.

Highlights

  • DNA variants in the world population of a species reflect the genetic diversity of the species

  • While examining variants in whole-genome sequenced wild isolates of the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans, we discovered apparent correlations between the recombination rate and the proportion of many variant types

  • We present a model of a concerted action of two groups of mutation mechanisms, which act according to different components of the recombination rate

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic diversity is maintained by interplay between the continuing generation and removal of variants; variants are produced by mutation and removed by genetic drift or natural selection during evolution. The modes of generating mutation are biologically diverse, and variants accumulate throughout the life history of a species [1]. Natural selection can drive non-neutral variants to extinction or fixation. Neutral variants can be removed either by genetic drift [2], which is driven by simple chance, or by natural selection because of linkage or proximity to a non-neutral variant [3, 4]. Genetic diversity is shaped by both mutation and natural selection

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