Authors
Clare D Marsden, Diego Ortega-Del Vecchyo, Dennis P O’Brien, Jeremy F Taylor, Oscar Ramirez, Carles Vilà, Tomas Marques-Bonet, Robert D Schnabel, Robert K Wayne, Kirk E Lohmueller
Publication date
2016/1/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
113
Issue
1
Pages
152-157
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Population bottlenecks, inbreeding, and artificial selection can all, in principle, influence levels of deleterious genetic variation. However, the relative importance of each of these effects on genome-wide patterns of deleterious variation remains controversial. Domestic and wild canids offer a powerful system to address the role of these factors in influencing deleterious variation because their history is dominated by known bottlenecks and intense artificial selection. Here, we assess genome-wide patterns of deleterious variation in 90 whole-genome sequences from breed dogs, village dogs, and gray wolves. We find that the ratio of amino acid changing heterozygosity to silent heterozygosity is higher in dogs than in wolves and, on average, dogs have 2–3% higher genetic load than gray wolves. Multiple lines of evidence indicate this pattern is driven by less efficient natural selection due to bottlenecks associated with …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CD Marsden, D Ortega-Del Vecchyo, DP O'Brien… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016