The effect of autopolyploidy on population genetic signals of hard sweeps

2019
Searching for the population genomicsignals left behind by positive selection is a major focus of evolutionary biology, particularly as sequencing technologies develop and costs decline. The effect of the number of chromosome copies (i.e. ploidy) on the manifestation of these signals remains an outstanding question, despite a wide appreciation of ploidy being a fundamental parameter governing numerous biological processes. We clarify the principal forces governing the differential manifestation and persistence of the signal of selection by separating the effects of polyploidy on rates of fixation versus rates of diversity (i.e. mutation and recombination) with a set of coalescent simulations. We explore what the major consequences of polyploidy, such as a more localized signal, greater dependence on dominance, and longer persistence of the signal following fixation, mean for within- and across-ploidy inference on the strength and prevalence of selective sweeps. As genomic advances continue to open doors for interrogating natural systems, studies such as this aid our ability to anticipate, interpret, and compare data across ploidy levels.
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