Authors
Amy Lynd, David Weetman, Susana Barbosa, Alexander Egyir Yawson, Sara Mitchell, Joao Pinto, Ian Hastings, Martin J Donnelly
Publication date
2010/5/1
Journal
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Volume
27
Issue
5
Pages
1117-1125
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Alleles subject to strong, recent positive selection will be swept toward fixation together with contiguous sections of the genome. Whether the genomic signatures of such selection will be readily detectable in outbred wild populations is unclear. In this study, we employ haplotype diversity analysis to examine evidence for selective sweeps around knockdown resistance (kdr) mutations associated with resistance to dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and pyrethroid insecticides in the mosquito Anopheles gambiae. Both kdr mutations have significantly lower haplotype diversity than the wild-type (nonresistant) allele, with kdr L1014F showing the most pronounced footprint of selection. We complement these data with a time series of collections showing that the L1014F allele has increased in frequency from 0.05 to 0.54 in 5 years, consistent with a maximum likelihood–fitted selection coefficient of 0.16 and a …
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