Abstract

It is common to look for signatures of local adaptation in genomes by identifying loci with extreme levels of allele frequency divergence among populations. This approach to finding genes associated with local adaptation often assumes antagonistic pleiotropy, wherein alternative alleles are strongly favored in alternative environments. Conditional neutrality has been proposed as an alternative to antagonistic pleiotropy, but conditionally neutral polymorphisms are transient, and it is unclear how much outlier signal would be maintained under different forms of conditional neutrality. Here, we use individual-based simulations and a simple analytical heuristic to show that a pattern that mimics local adaptation at the phenotypic level, where each genotype has the highest fitness in its home environment, can be produced by the accumulation of mutations that are neutral in their home environment and deleterious in nonlocal environments. Because conditionally deleterious mutations likely arise at a rate many times higher than conditionally beneficial mutations, they can have a significant cumulative effect on fitness even when individual effect sizes are small. We show that conditionally deleterious mutations driving nonlocal maladaptation may be undetectable by even the most powerful genome scans, as differences in allele frequency between populations are typically small. We also explore the evolutionary effects of conditionally beneficial mutations and find that they can maintain significant signals of local adaptation, and they would be more readily detectable than conditionally deleterious mutations using conventional genome scan approaches. We discuss implications for interpreting outcomes of transplant experiments and genome scans that are used to study the genetic basis of local adaptation.

Highlights

  • Local adaptation is the presence of genotype-by-environment interactions for fitness, such that each local population has its highest fitness in its home site (Kawecki and Ebert2004; Blanquart et al 2013; Richardson et al 2014)

  • We show that conditionally deleterious mutations driving non-local maladaptation may be undetectable by even the most powerful genome scans, as differences in allele frequency between populations are typically small

  • Our study suggests that conditionally neutral mutations, and in particular conditionally deleterious mutations, result in evolutionary dynamics that may play an important role contributing to the genotype by environment interaction for fitness in transplant experiments that is commonly interpreted as evidence of local adaptation

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Summary

Introduction

Local adaptation is the presence of genotype-by-environment interactions for fitness, such that each local population has its highest fitness in its home site (Kawecki and Ebert2004; Blanquart et al 2013; Richardson et al 2014). Most theoretical study of local adaptation has focused on dynamics under antagonistic pleiotropy (AP; Felsenstein 1976; Bürger 2014), whereby the two alleles at a single locus have opposite fitness profiles, with each having high fitness in one environment and low fitness in the other (Figure 1). Under this type of fitness profile, local adaptation tends to be deterministically maintained when the migration rate between the two environments is sufficiently restricted relative to the strength of divergent selection, which yields large and persistent differences in allele frequency between populations (Felsenstein 1976; Burger 2014). Despite the potential role of conditional neutrality in genotype-by-environment interactions for fitness, it is unclear how much signal can be contributed by such mutations at equilibrium, and whether the causal mutations can be differentiated from unconditionally neutral loci (see, for example, Yoder and Tiffin, 2018)

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