MtDNA genomes reveal relaxed purifying selection during human population expansion after the Last Glacial Maximum.
Hong-Xiang ZhengShi YanMenghan ZhangZhenglong GuJiucun WangLi JinPublished in: Molecular biology and evolution (2024)
Modern humans have experienced explosive population growth in the past thousand years. We hypothesized that recent human populations have inhabited environments with relaxation of selective constraints, possibly due to the more abundant food supply after the Last Glacial Maximum. The ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous mutations (N/S ratio) is a useful and common statistic for measuring selective constraints. In this study, we reconstructed a high-resolution phylogenetic tree using a total of 26,419 East Eurasian mtDNA genomes, which were further classified into expansion and non-expansion groups on the basis of the frequencies of their founder lineages. We observed a much higher N/S ratio in the expansion group, especially for nonsynonymous mutations with moderately deleterious effects, indicating a weaker effect of purifying selection in the expanded clades. However, this observation on N/S ratio was unlikely in computer simulations where all individuals were under the same selective constraints. Thus, we argue that the expanded populations were subjected to weaker selective constraints than the non-expanded populations were. The mildly deleterious mutations were retained during population expansion, which could have a profound impact on present-day disease patterns.