Abstract:
The ultimate response to directional selection (i.e., the selection
limit) under recurrent mutation is analyzed by a diffusion approximation
for a population in which there are k possible alleles at a locus. The
limit mainly depends on two scaled parameters S (= 4Ns sigma a) and theta
(= 4Nu) and k, the number of alleles, where N is the effective population
size, u is the mutation rate, s is the selection coefficient, and sigma
2a is the variance of allelic effects. When the selection pressure is weak
(S less than or equal to 0.5), the limit is given approximately by 2S sigma
a[1 - (1 + c2)/k]/(theta + 1) for additive effects of alleles, where c
is the coefficient of variation of the mutation rates among alleles. For
strong selection, other approximations are devised to analyze the limit
in different parameter regions. The effect of mutation on selection limits
largely relies on the potential of mutation to introduce new and better
alleles into the population. This effect is, however, bounded under the
present model. Unequal mutation rates among alleles tend to reduce the
selection limit, and can have a substantial effect only for small numbers
of alleles and weak selection. The selection limit decreases as the mutation
rate increases.