Abstract

Tandem duplications are an essential source of genetic novelty, and their variation in natural populations is expected to influence adaptive walks. Here, we describe evolutionary impacts of recently-derived, segregating tandem duplications in Drosophila yakuba and Drosophila simulans. We observe an excess of duplicated genes involved in defense against pathogens, insecticide resistance, chorion development, cuticular peptides, and lipases or endopeptidases associated with the accessory glands across both species. The observed agreement is greater than expectations on chance alone, suggesting large amounts of convergence across functional categories. We document evidence of widespread selection on the D. simulans X, suggesting adaptation through duplication is common on the X. Despite the evidence for positive selection, duplicates display an excess of low frequency variants consistent with largely detrimental impacts, limiting the variation that can effectively facilitate adaptation. Standing variation for tandem duplications spans less than 25% of the genome in D. yakuba and D. simulans, indicating that evolution will be strictly limited by mutation, even in organisms with large population sizes. Effective whole gene duplication rates are low at 1.17 × 10−9 per gene per generation in D. yakuba and 6.03 × 10−10 per gene per generation in D. simulans, suggesting long wait times for new mutations on the order of thousands of years for the establishment of sweeps. Hence, in cases where adaptation depends on individual tandem duplications, evolution will be severely limited by mutation. We observe low levels of parallel recruitment of the same duplicated gene in different species, suggesting that the span of standing variation will define evolutionary outcomes in spite of convergence across gene ontologies consistent with rapidly evolving phenotypes.

Highlights

  • Tandem duplications are an essential source of genetic novelty that is useful for the development of novel traits [1,2,3] and their prevalence in populations is expected to influence the arc of evolutionary trajectories

  • We have described the prevalence of tandem duplications in natural populations of D. yakuba and D. simulans, their frequencies in the population, and the genes that they affect

  • We find that tandem duplications show a bias towards gene ontologies associated with rapid evolutionary processes and that they commonly affect the X chromosome in D. simulans in comparison to the autosomes

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Summary

Introduction

Tandem duplications are an essential source of genetic novelty that is useful for the development of novel traits [1,2,3] and their prevalence in populations is expected to influence the arc of evolutionary trajectories. Surveys based on single sequenced reference genomes have suggested that whole gene duplications may form at low rates in comparison with SNPs, with even lower mutation rates for complex variants such as chimeric genes [4, 8, 10, 11] These alternative genetic structures are known forces of evolutionary innovation [12,13,14,15,16]. Whole gene duplications often develop novel functions or specialize in ancestral functions [1], and chimeric genes are more likely still to produce novel molecular effects and play a role in adaptive evolution [12] These variants contribute substantially to the evolution of genome content [8, 10, 17], their lower rates of formation may render evolution of tandem duplications more likely to be limited by mutation

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