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http://conacyt.repositorioinstitucional.mx/jspui/handle/1000/8850
L-Shaped Distributions of the Relative Substitution Rates (c/µ) in SARS-COV-2 with or without Molecular Clocks, Challenging Mainstream Evolutionary Theories | |
Chun Wu Nicholas Paradis | |
Acceso Abierto | |
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas | |
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.04.29.591599 | |
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.04.29.591599v1 | |
A definitive test to quantify fitness changes of mutations is required to end a continuing 50-year “neutralist-selectionist” debate in evolutionary biology. Our previous work introduced a substitution-mutation rate ratio c/µ test (c: substitution rate in Translated Region/TR or UnTranslated Region/UTR; µ: mutation rate) to quantify the selection pressure and thus the proportions of strictly neutral, nearly neutral, beneficial, and deleterious mutations in a genome. Intriguingly, both a L-shaped probability distribution of c/µ and molecular clock were observed for SARS-COV-2’s genome. We found that the proportion of the different mutation types from the distribution is not consistent with the hypotheses of the three existing evolution theories (Kimura’s Neutral Theory/KNT, Ohta’s Nearly Neutral Theory/ONNT and the Selectionist Theory/ST), and a balance condition explains the molecular clock, thus we proposed a new theory named as Near-Neutral Balanced Selectionist Theory (NNBST). In this study, the c/µ analysis was extended beyond the genome to 26 TRs, 12 UTRs, and 10 TRSs (Transcriptional Regulatory Sequences) of SARS-COV-2. While L-shaped probability distributions of c/µ were observed for all of 49 segments, molecular clocks were observed for only 24 segments, supporting NNBST and Near-Neutral Unbalanced Selectionist Theory (NNUST) to explain the molecular evolution of 24/25 segments with/without molecular clocks. Thus, the Near-Neutral Selectionist Theory (NNST) integrates traditional neutral and selectionist theories to deepen our understanding of how mutation, selection, and genetic drift influence genomic evolution. Author Summary The “neutralist-selectionist” debate in molecular evolution has been unresolved for 50 years due to the three main theories of molecular evolution (Kimura’s Neutral Theory/KNT, Ohta’s Nearly-Neutral Theory/ONNT, Selectionist Theory/ST) disagreeing on the proportion of neutral mutations (KNT), nearly-neutral deleterious mutations (ONNT) and adaptive mutations (ST) within species. We recently developed a robust method, the c/µ relative substitution rate test, to quantify the proportion of each mutation type within >11K genomic sequences of SARS-COV-2 RNA virus. Our previous analysis revealed an L-shaped c/µ probability distribution and a constant substitution rate (e.g., molecular clock) for the SARS-COV-2 genome over 19 months, and the proportions of mutation types were inconsistent with those predicted by the three theories | |
bioRxiv | |
30-04-2024 | |
Preimpreso | |
Inglés | |
Público en general | |
VIRUS RESPIRATORIOS | |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Materiales de Consulta y Comunicados Técnicos |
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