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Selective Sweep at the Drosophila melanogaster Suppressor of Hairless Locus and Its Association With the In(2L)t Inversion Polymorphism
Frantz Depaulisa, Lionel Braziera, and Michel Veuilleaa Biologie Intégrative des Populations, Laboratoire d'Ecologie, Paris 6 University, 75005 Paris, France
Corresponding author: Michel Veuille, EPHE and Laboratoire d’Ecologie UMR 7625, Cc 237, Université Paris 6, 7 quai Saint-Bernard, 75005 Paris, France., mveuille{at}snv.jussieu.fr (E-mail)
Communicating editor: W. STEPHAN
| ABSTRACT |
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The hitchhiking model of population genetics predicts that an allele favored by Darwinian selection can replace haplotypes from the same locus previously established at a neutral mutation-drift equilibrium. This process, known as "selective sweep," was studied by comparing molecular variation between the polymorphic In(2L)t inversion and the standard chromosome. Sequence variation was recorded at the Suppressor of Hairless (Su[H]) gene in an African population of Drosophila melanogaster. We found 47 nucleotide polymorphisms among 20 sequences of 1.2 kb. Neutrality tests were nonsignificant at the nucleotide level. However, these sites were strongly associated, because 290 out of 741 observed pairwise combinations between them were in significant linkage disequilibrium. We found only seven haplotypes, two occurring in the 9 In(2L)t chromosomes, and five in the 11 standard chromosomes, with no shared haplotype. Two haplotypes, one in each chromosome arrangement, made up two-thirds of the sample. This low haplotype diversity departed from neutrality in a haplotype test. This pattern supports a selective sweep hypothesis for the Su(H) chromosome region.
THE theory of genetic hitchhiking (![]()
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To answer this question, we studied the In(2L)t polymorphic inversion. The underlying rationale was that chromosome inversions can reveal selective sweeps because they strongly inhibit recombination between chromosomal types (see ![]()
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We chose to carry out this study on the Suppressor of Hairless gene (Su(H)) after surveying length variation in several trinucleotide microsatellites from chromosome 2 (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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A random sample of 85 isochromosomal lines for chromosome 2 was established by ![]()
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Su(H) microsatellite variation was studied according to ![]()
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Sequences were manually aligned. Their phylogeny was analyzed using MEGA (![]()
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The K-test and H-test of haplotype diversity were run according to ![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Association between the inversion and the Su(H) microsatellite:
Four size variants differing by one repeat unit (one codon) were observed at the Su(H) microsatellite (Table 1). The alleles were 251, 254, 257, and 260 nucleotides long and were named after their size. The 251 allele was present on 24 of the 25 inverted chromosomes, but only on 4 of the 22 standard chromosomes. The standard arrangements were more variable, with four alleles and a larger sample heterozygosity (H = 0.615) than the other class (H = 0.076). The linkage disequilibrium between the microsatellite and the inversion was assessed using Fisher's exact test for multiple classes (![]()
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Sequence polymorphism:
An alignment of polymorphisms is shown in Figure 1. We found nucleotide polymorphism at 47 sites, of which 17 were polymorphic only in standard, 6 only in In(2L)t, and the remaining 24 in both arrangements. These polymorphisms involved two changes out of 58.67 effective synonymous sites (
= 0.00924), no change out of 241.33 effective nonsynonymous sites, 42 substitutions out of 712 intron sites (
= 0.0206), and three intronic positions where both indels and substitutions occurred. The level of nucleotide variation, as estimated by
(![]()
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Linkage disequilibrium between nucleotide polymorphisms:
Although levels of variation were thus unremarkable, nucleotide polymorphism was clumped into a small number of haplotypes, as shown in Figure 1. Only two haplotypes were found in In(2L)t and five in standard. The two arrangements shared no haplotype. Two haplotypes, one in the inversion and one in standard, made up two-thirds of the sample (13 out of 20 sequences). Linkage disequilibrium was studied by calculating the P value of Fisher's exact test in all pairwise associations of substitution polymorphisms. Of 741 possible pairwise combinations between informative sites, 290 were significant at the 0.05 level, of which 182 were significant at the 0.001 level. Bonferroni's correction was used to correct for multiple testing, and 35 tests remained significant at the 0.05 level. To our knowledge, this very high proportion by far exceeds the results of any similar study carried out on this species. The large number of tests that are significant at the 0.001 level results from the fact that an excess of chromosomes belonging to the same haplotypes repeatedly give the same result along the sequence. These observations rule out the null hypothesis of random association. They are in agreement with the structuring of basic nucleotide variation into haplotypes.
Haplotype tests:
We tested the probability of observing k
7 haplotypes and a haplotype diversity of H = 0.76, given a sample of n = 20 sequences showing S = 44 diallelic polymorphisms using the K-test and the H-test (![]()
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Phylogenetic analysis of the haplotypes:
To illustrate the structuring of variation, we carried out a phylogenetic analysis of the haplotypes. This approach was validated by the fact that the minimum number of recombination events in the sample, as estimated after HUDSON and KAPLAN's (1985) method, was only one. A neighbor-joining tree is shown in Figure 2. The phylogenetic analysis provided the same topology under the unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic averages (UPGMA) and maximum parsimony methods (data not shown) and was supported by high bootstrap values. The In(2L)t and standard chromosomes do not represent completely isolated lines. It was mentioned earlier that the two types of chromosomes shared 24 out of 47 polymorphic sites, suggesting a substantial genetic exchange of material between the two arrangements in the past. The phylogeny comprises a small cluster of four related sequences, consisting of two inverted and two standard haplotypes. This cluster substantially diverges from the other sequences, which make up a larger cluster. The latter involves the two major haplotypes (one inverted and one standard) and several intermediates belonging to standard. The only recombination event substantiated by the four-gamete rule (![]()
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Neutrality tests within each chromosomal arrangement:
We recorded linkage disequilibrium within each chromosomal arrangement. Linkage disequilibrium between the 31 polymorphisms from the two inverted haplotypes was significant (P = 0.028, Fisher's exact test). Among the 34 polymorphic sites from standard chromosomes, 185 of the 561 comparisons were significant (P < 0.05). They corresponded to three of the comparisons between the five haplotypes. This confirms the clustering of variation into a few combinations, as was already apparent from Figure 1. Neutrality tests were nonsignificant, except for Fu and Li's test, which was marginally significant among inversions (Table 3), meaning that singletons were not equally distributed in haplotypes from this subsample. However, because its nine sequences make up only two haplotypes, this result is not very informative. Haplotype tests deserve more interest, because they were significant on pooled data. If we apply these tests to each chromosome class separately, they are significant in all cases. This indicates that the significance was not due to a heterogeneity of the data caused by the inversion.
Molecular divergence between chromosomal arrangements:
The genetic divergence between the two karyotypes can be assessed using a fixation index (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Departure from neutrality in a highly polymorphic gene:
The Su(H) gene shows a strong contrast between the distribution of polymorphisms at the nucleotide level and at the haplotype level. Nucleotide variation may be briefly described as a normal neutral polymorphism. It presents the composition expected for this species, both in the number of polymorphisms and in the proportion of rare and frequent variants. It therefore appears neutral under available neutrality tests. On the contrary, there is a drastic deficit of haplotypes. All tests lead to the conclusion that the number of haplotypes has recently been substantially reduced. A theoretical model by ![]()
Comparing selective vs. demographic explanations:
This effect could have been caused by a selective sweep or by a population bottleneck. The two processes have the same effect at the level of single genes, but the first applies to part of the genome, whereas the second applies to the whole of it. Molecular variation is known for other genes from the Lamto sample. Restriction site polymorphism has been observed in 85 chromosomes in Lamto for 2.4 kb of the Adh gene (![]()
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Comparison with variation at the Acp26Aa and Acp26Ab loci (![]()
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Relation of the inversion to the selective sweep:
Our conclusion is thus that the haplotype pattern of Su(H) results from a selective sweep that affected both chromosome arrangements at a nearby locus. It is remarkable that we do not need to consider the two chromosome arrangements separately to come to this conclusion. Linkage disequilibrium and haplotype tests yield significant results on pooled data, even though they are also significant for each of the chromosome arrangements. This suggests that the same selective sweep event affected both arrangements. An outline of this process is presented in Figure 3. In a first step, an advantageous allele arises by mutation at an unidentified locus "U" on chromosome 2. This new allele of U is linked to one of the Su(H) haplotypes and to one of the chromosome arrangements, In(2L)t or standard. If Su(H) is at a neutral mutation-drift equilibrium, most haplotypes will be different, as is observed in other D. melanogaster genes, and little linkage disequilibrium will be present between polymorphic sites. In a second step, the favored allele of U goes to fixation in the first chromosome arrangement. This causes a selective sweep at Su(H), increasing the frequency of the first haplotype associated with the favored allele. Because the recombination rate is not inhibited within chromosome arrangements, this allele is soon linked to several other Su(H) haplotypes, which thus survive the selective sweep event. In a third step, the favored allele recombines into the other chromosomal arrangement and links to another Su(H) haplotype. The selective sweep process continues in this arrangement, albeit involving different haplotypes. The strong differentiation observed between haplotypes thus conforms to predictions of a hitchhiking model with recombination where different alleles are affected in different populations (![]()
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An alternative hypothesis is that two selective sweep events, one on each chromosomal arrangement, occurred independently. This would cause a balanced polymorphism pattern between them. This explanation was put forward by ![]()
This schema is based on simple hypotheses. In addition, an implicit observation is that selection did not sweep away the inversion polymorphism. The focus of this study is not to evaluate the individual contribution of genes to this phenomenon. We cannot say, from this study, to what extent individual genes can affect an inversion frequency. We can only rule out the hypothesis of a balanced polymorphism at Su(H). The possible role of inversions in maintaining genetic polymorphism under balanced selection was put forward by ![]()
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Our study indicates a way to observe selective sweeps in genomes showing many inversion polymorphisms, as in D. melanogaster (![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Anne Turbé for contributing to sequencing as a DEUG student, Michèle Huet for technical assistance, and Matthew Cobb for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université Pierre-et-Marie Curie, and École Normale Supérieure.
Manuscript received September 4, 1998; Accepted for publication April 8, 1999.
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