4.5 Article

Stabilizing selection, mutational bias, and the evolution of sex

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 72, Issue 9, Pages 1740-1758

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.13547

Keywords

Adaptive landscape; epistasis; evolutionary quantitative genetics; multilocus population genetics; reproductive systems

Funding

  1. French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (project SexChange) [ANR-14-CE02-0001]

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Stabilizing selection around a fixed phenotypic optimum is expected to disfavor sexual reproduction, since asexually reproducing organisms can maintain a higher fitness at equilibrium, while sex disrupts combinations of compensatory mutations. This conclusion rests on the assumption that mutational effects on phenotypic traits are unbiased, that is, mutation does not tend to push phenotypes in any particular direction. In this article, we consider a model of stabilizing selection acting on an arbitrary number of polygenic traits coded by bialellic loci, and show that mutational bias may greatly reduce the mean fitness of asexual populations compared with sexual ones in regimes where mutations have weak to moderate fitness effects. Indeed, mutation and drift tend to push the population mean phenotype away from the optimum, this effect being enhanced by the low effective population size of asexual populations. In a second part, we present results from individual-based simulations showing that positive rates of sex are favored when mutational bias is present, while the population evolves toward complete asexuality in the absence of bias. We also present analytical (QLE) approximations for the selective forces acting on sex in terms of the effect of sex on the mean and variance in fitness among offspring.

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