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Dominance of Mutations Affecting Viability in Drosophila melanogaster
James D. Frya and Sergey V. Nuzhdinba Department of Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627
b Section of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, California 95616
Corresponding author: James D. Fry, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627-0211., jfry{at}mail.rochester.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: W. STEPHAN
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
There have been several attempts to estimate the average dominance (ratio of heterozygous to homozygous effects) of spontaneous deleterious mutations in Drosophila melanogaster, but these have given inconsistent results. We investigated whether transposable element (TE) insertions have higher average dominance for egg-to-adult viability than do point mutations, a possibility suggested by the types of fitness-depressing effects that TEs are believed to have. If so, then variation in dominance estimates among strains and crosses would be expected as a consequence of variation in TE activity. As a first test, we estimated the average dominance of all mutations and of copia insertions in a set of lines that had accumulated spontaneous mutations for 33 generations. A traditional regression method gave a dominance estimate for all mutations of 0.17, whereas average dominance of copia insertions was 0.51; the difference between these two estimates approached significance (P = 0.08). As a second test, we reanalyzed ![]()
THE rates and effects of spontaneous deleterious mutation figure importantly in much evolutionary and ecological theory (reviewed in ![]()
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Homozygous and heterozygous effects of mutations are related by the dominance coefficient, h. An h value of 0.5 implies additivity of mutations, while values of 0 and 1 imply complete recessivity and complete dominance, respectively. Most of the available information on dominance coefficients of deleterious mutations in higher eukaryotes comes from mutation-accumulation (MA) experiments in Drosophila melanogaster (reviewed in ![]()
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If an appropriate control line is availablei.e., one that preserves the characteristics of the progenitor stock before mutation-accumulationthen h can be estimated from the declines in mean viability of the MA lines in both heterozygous and homozygous conditions. The details depend on whether heterozygotes are generated by crossing to the control or other relatively mutant-free stock ("coupling" crosses), in which case the new mutations are on only one homolog, or by crossing different MA lines to each other ("repulsion" crosses), in which case mutations are on both homologs. The general formula is
![]() |
(1) |
(![]()
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![]()
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(2) |
Here, 
,
is the covariance of coupling heterozygote viability with viability of the corresponding homozygote or the covariance of repulsion heterozygote viability with the sum of the viabilities of the corresponding homozygotes, and
2G,X is the variance component among lines for homozygous viability. The mean decline method gives an estimate of h weighted by s, the homozygous effect of mutations, while the regression method estimates h weighted by s2. While the latter weighting is less desirable than the former, the regression method has the advantage of not requiring a control line.
The above methods have been applied to data from three MA experiments by Mukai and co-workers (![]()
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0.1) when they were made heterozygous against unrelated chromosomes (![]()
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0.3 using the regression method.
One hypothesis for the variation in reported h estimates is that h varies among different types of mutations. Transposable element (TE) insertions account for roughly half of all spontaneous mutations in D. melanogaster (![]()
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In spite of the above considerations, there have been no tests of whether TE insertions show greater average dominance in their fitness effects than do other types of mutations. We report here two tests of this hypothesis for mutations affecting viability in D. melanogaster. For the first test, we used a set of MA lines from the experiment of ![]()
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Second, we have reexamined the data of ![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Rearing conditions and stocks:
Flies were reared under continuous light in 2.5-cm-diameter shell vials containing 9 ml of cornmeal-molasses dead yeast-agar medium (![]()
The MA lines and control populations were made using the balancer stock Cy/Pm; ve, as described in ![]()
0.01 for the third and fourth chromosomes. The sublines were subsequently maintained by mass transfer in two vials per subline on 4-week generations at 18°. Some of the 34 original MA lines were infertile or difficult to maintain as homozygotes; as a result, only 25 lines were available by the time the work reported below was conducted.
While mutations were being accumulated in the MA lines, each of the three control populations was maintained at a population size of
300 +/+ flies each, where + denotes the progenitor chromosome for the MA experiment. To further slow accumulation of mutations, the control populations were maintained on a longer generation interval than the MA lines (![]()
All MA and control lines were marked with the third chromosome marker veinlet (ve); no ve+ flies were observed in any of the lines.
Estimation of heterozygous viabilities:
This experiment was performed in early 1999. Males from each subline of each MA and control line were first crossed to Cy/Pm females; the Pm/+ male progeny were then used for the crosses to measure viability. In each cross, eight Cy/Pm females were mated to eight Pm/+ males. Crosses were conducted in 12 blocks, each set up on a different day using a different randomized order of crosses, with one cross per subline per block. After 5 days, all flies were transferred to a second vial; after 5 more days, the flies were discarded. Progeny were counted on days 12, 14, and 19 after the crosses were set up.
The above crosses produce Cy/Pm, Cy/+, and Pm/+ flies in equal expected numbers (the Cy/Cy combination is lethal). The Cy/Pm genotype is the same regardless of the MA or control line used and therefore can be used as a reference genotype for estimating the relative viability of the other two genotypes, which are heterozygous for MA or control line chromosomes. For each cross, counts from the two vials were pooled; the relative viability of Cy or Pm heterozygotes was then estimated as (no. of Cy/+ or Pm/+ flies)/(no. of Cy/Pm flies + 1). The 1 in the denominator is a slight bias correction (![]()
Data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure in SAS (![]()
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Dominance of mutations was estimated by both the mean decline and regression methods. Data on homozygous viability came from the generation 33 data set of ![]()
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For the regression method (Equation 2), 
,
was calculated using mean viabilities that had been standardized by dividing by the corresponding control mean. Bootstrap 95% confidence intervals for hREG were calculated by resampling lines with replacement 10,000 times, repeating the calculations (including the calculation of
2G,X) each time. The 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles of the resulting distributions served as the upper and lower bounds of the confidence limit.
2G,X was negative in only a trivial fraction (0.11%) of the bootstrap replicates; in these cases it was set to 10-6.
Determination of copia copy number and effects on viability:
Insertion sites of copia were determined in both sublines of 24 of the 25 MA lines in late 1999. copia was scored by in situ hybridization of the plasmid cDM5002 containing a full-length copia transposable element (![]()
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To estimate copia effects on heterozygous and homozygous viability, least-squares line means were calculated on log-transformed data and regressed on the number of copia sites shared by both sublines of a line. The resulting slopes can be interpreted as the proportional decline in viability due to the average copia insertion. copia sites not present in both sublines were ignored, because these most likely arose from insertions that occurred after the sublines were created. This would have been after the homozygous viability data were collected, and possibly after the heterozygous data were collected as well. The proportion of genetic variance explained by the regressions was calculated as the bias-adjusted R2 of the model times the ratio
2
/
2G,X for log-transformed heterozygous or homozygous viability as appropriate, where
2
is the variance among line means.
The average dominance of copia insertions, hCOPIA, was estimated as the ratio of heterozygous to homozygous effects. A 95% confidence limit for hCOPIA was calculated by taking 10,000 bootstrap samples, repeating both regressions for each sample. Replicates in which the regression of homozygous viability on copia number was positive (4.1% of the total) were excluded. For each bootstrap sample, the difference hCOPIA - hREG was calculated; the fraction of replicates in which this difference is negative was used as the empirical P value for testing the one-sided hypothesis hCOPIA > hREG against the null hypothesis hCOPIA = hREG.
Reanalysis of data of ![]()
Although ![]()
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For each treatment, we calculated the mean dominance estimate, weighted by the reciprocal of the squared standard errors (![]()
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| RESULTS |
|---|
Heterozygous viability of MA lines:
Viability of Cy/+ and Pm/+ genotypes bearing + chromosomes from the MA or control lines was measured relative to the Cy/Pm standard. Although we tested only 25 MA lines, the replication within lines (24 crosses) was high compared to previous studies. Mean viability of either genotype did not differ between the MA lines and controls (Table 1). Variation among MA lines was marginally significant for Pm/+ viability (P = 0.079), but not for Cy/+ or average heterozygous viability (P > 0.15). Variation among sublines within lines was nonsignificant for all three viability measures (P > 0.17).
|
Cy/+ and Pm/+ viabilities were highly correlated (product moment correlation of MA line means = 0.80, P < 0.0001; point estimate of genetic correlation = 1.12). In addition, among-line variances of the two measures were not significantly different (P > 0.2). For these reasons, dominance estimates and estimates of copia effects are presented for average heterozygous viability only.
The estimate of dominance by the mean decline method is -0.10, with a broad confidence limit of -0.58 to +0.37. The means give little information regarding dominance. The regression of heterozygous on homozygous viability was positive and marginally significant (P = 0.085, one-tailed; Fig 1). The estimate of dominance by the regression method (hREG) is 0.16, with a bootstrap 95% confidence limit of -0.05 to +0.47. Taken together, the dominance estimates indicate that additivity of mutations can be rejected. Although the regression results suggest that mutations had some heterozygous effects, complete recessivity cannot be formally rejected.
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Effects of copia on heterozygous and homozygous viability:
Nine copia sites were shared by all MA lines; these were apparently present in the progenitor of the MA lines. copia transposed actively in the lines; there were an average of 2.2 new insertions per line (range 06).
The regression of heterozygous viability on copia copy number was significantly negative (Fig 2; P = 0.04, one-tailed), while that of homozygous viability on copy number was marginally significant (P = 0.08). Slopes (SE) were -0.013 (0.007) and -0.025 (0.017), respectively; insertion number explained 24% of the genetic variance of heterozygous viability but only 4.7% of that of homozygous viability. The ratio of the two slopes gives a dominance estimate for copia insertions of 0.51, suggesting approximate additivity. The bootstrap confidence interval for hCOPIA is 0.095.0; recessivity of copia insertions can therefore be rejected. hCOPIA > hREG in all but 8.3% of the bootstrap samples. Thus, while we cannot formally reject the hypothesis hCOPIA = hREG, the difference approaches significance.
|
Comparison of dominance of spontaneous and EMS-induced mutations in Ohnishi's (1974) experiment:
Dominance estimates increased as the fraction of spontaneous mutations increased, as predicted (Fig 3). Unsurprisingly, given the small number of points, the regression is not quite significant (P = 0.066, one-tailed). The Y-intercept gives an estimate of the dominance of EMS mutations that is low and not significantly different from zero (hEMS = 0.021; SE = 0.015; P = 0.20, one-tailed). In contrast, the estimated dominance of spontaneous mutations is significantly greater than zero (hSPONT = 0.141, SE = 0.016, P = 0.04). There is no tendency for dominance estimates from coupling crosses to differ from those of repulsion crosses (Fig 3).
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
The hypothesis that transposable element insertions have effects on viability that are less recessive than those of base substitutions leads to the prediction that dominance coefficients should obey the inequalities h(TE insertions) > h(all spontaneous mutations) > h(EMS-induced mutations). In the experiment with the MA lines of ![]()
0.5, suggesting that copia had roughly additive effects on viability. A bootstrap comparison of the dominance of copia insertions with the regression method estimate of dominance of all mutations indicated that the difference approached significance (P = 0.083). In the reanalysis of OHNISHI's (1974) data, we found evidence for higher dominance of spontaneous mutations than of EMS-induced mutations (Fig 3), but this too fell short of formal significance (P = 0.066). Because both predicted inequalities derive from the same hypothesis, we can use Fisher's method of combining probabilities (![]()
2 = 10.41, d.f. = 4, P = 0.034). Our results thus give modest support for the hypothesis that TE insertions have greater average dominance than do base substitutions.
The fitness effects of TEs are likely to be mediated through multiple pathways, rather than solely through harmful effects of their insertions on the expression of nearby genes. There are three potential mechanisms of selection against TEs (for review see ![]()
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We believe our results can best be explained by the TE-product expression model, for the following reasons. Although ectopic exchange events among TEs present in multiple copies can result in chromosome rearrangements with negative fitness effects, such events are expected to occur primarily in female meiosis (![]()
The view that TEs are closer to additive than to recessive in their fitness effects is indirectly supported by the abundance of TEs on X chromosomes vs. autosomes. If TEs were recessive, the X should contain
13% of all inserts, rather than 20% when they are additive. While variable across TE families, actual distributions are closer to the latter number (reviewed by ![]()
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We are unaware of other studies in which dominance coefficients of different types of mutations have been measured in the same genetic background. Two pairs of studies, however, have reported dominance estimates for EMS-induced mutations and P-element insertions, respectively. ![]()
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Our results add to the growing body of evidence that copia insertions in laboratory lines in which copia transposes at a high rate reduce fitness traits on the order of 1% per insert (D. HOULE and S. V. NUZHDIN, unpublished results; E. PASYUKOVA, S. V. NUZHDIN, T. V. MOROZOVA and T. F. C. MACKAY, unpublished results). These negative effects may be related to the putative copia virus-like particles observed in cell nuclei of lines in which copia is active (![]()
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We speculate that genetic modification of TE transcription could account for some of the puzzling results regarding dominance of spontaneous mutations from Mukai's first mutation-accumulation experiment (![]()
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0.4 (![]()
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Our results give evidence that the average dominance of mutations affecting viability varies among mutation categories, with transposable element insertions having greater dominance than base substitutions. This is consistent with the view that expression of TE-encoded genes negatively affects host fitness. Additional studies that compare dominance of different mutation categories, as well as direct tests of the TE-product expression model, are needed.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank M. Harris, H. Maughan, and P. Rowan for help with the experiments and A. García-Dorado for help with the reanalysis of Ohnishi's data. This work was supported by National Science Foundation (NSF) grants DEB-9707470 and DEB-0108730 (J.D.F.), NSF grant DEB-9815621 (S.V.N.), and National Institutes of Health grants 1R01GM61773-01 and 1R24GM65513 (S.V.N.).
Manuscript received August 16, 2002; Accepted for publication December 29, 2002.
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