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Magazine
R837

to test for genetic drift. According to the 1.0


Quick guide theory of genetic drift, the variance in
Drift in diploid populations of 500
0.8
allele frequency across the populations
should increase by a factor of p(1–p)/ 2N 0.6
genetic drift each generation, where p is the current
0.4
frequency and N is the population
Joanna Masel size. Buri plotted the change in allele 0.2
frequency as a function of p, and got a
curve with the right shape, but for Ne = 0 twenty 40 60 80 100
What is genetic drift? Say you have 11.5 rather than N = 16. Ne is called the 1.0
Drift in diploid populations of 5000
a population of 5,000 people. That makes 'effective population size'. The fact that 0.8
10,000 copies of each gene. Imagine a it is low means that allele frequencies
gene where 3,000 of those copies are of changed faster than expected. 0.6
one particular allele or type. In the next

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0.4
generation, there won't necessarily be Can genetic drift be tested in natural
exactly 3,000 copies again. There may populations? If you sample two 0.2
be 3,050 or 2,960 copies instead. Some individuals from the same population,
gametes get randomly picked out of all the average number of sequence 0 twenty 40 60 80 100
the possible gametes that could have differences at drifting sites should 1.0 Drift plus selection at linked sites
been used. This is a bit like tossing a be 4µN, where µ is the mutation rate, in diploid populations of 5000
0.8
coin, and 100 coin tosses rarely yield which can be measured independently.
exactly 50 heads. Natural selection When we do this for mutations that we 0.6
happens when individuals developed think are neutral, we calculate effective
from certain gametes are more likely population sizes that are much lower 0.4

to survive and reproduce. Genetic than we would expect. What is more, 0.2
drift, together with mutation and the range in effective population sizes
recombination, randomly produces the across different species is also much 0 twenty 40 60 80 100
gametes that selection can act on. Or, if less than we would expect. Generations
there is no selection, allele frequencies
can change by mutation and genetic Why are effective population Current Biology
drift alone. sizes so low and so similar? If the
size of a population fluctuates over Figure 1. Drift and allele frequencies.
Simulated allele frequencies in replicate
Does genetic drift make much time, then genetic drift is dominated by
populations. Drift happens faster in small
difference to evolution? In some the smallest sizethe(bottleneck)
populationthat populations (top panel) than larger ones (middle
generations the allele frequency goes experiences. Effective population sizes panel). Selection at linked sites (bottom panel)
up, in other generations it goes down. are also lower if random success comes also increases the speed of change, but is not
Over the long run, the two mostly in rare 'jackpots' of many surviving identical to a small population size (top panel).
cancel each other out. But if an allele offspring at once, rather than through
frequency hits zero, then the next more frequent success at producing a
generation of genetic drift cannot smaller number of surviving offspring. same chromosome copy as a
cancel that out. That allele remains Perhaps most importantly, even if recessive mutation, selection would
extinct, unless it appears again by mutation. a mutation has no effect on fitness, make both mutations less common.
So, genetic drift could be important in it may be on the same chromosome If the eye color mutation was on
determining whether a new mutation as other mutations that do. There is both the other copy of that chromosome,
is lost, or whether it instead becomes background selection against linked selection would make it more
common enough for selection to deleterious mutations, and 'hitch-hiking' common.
determine its fate. In theory, in a small on positive selection for linked beneficial
enough population genetic drift could mutations. Allele frequencies can change OK, but isn't drift still important
also be important even for common much faster over time because of for rare alleles, even in large populations?
alleles. The effect of genetic drift over a linkage to selected sites than because Perhaps, but selection at linked sites
given time declines exponentially with of genetic drift, creating an apparently also affects rare alleles, whether they are
increasing population size (Figure 1). low population size. When a population neutral or under selection. For example,
goes through a bottleneck, selection at whether a beneficial new mutation
Can genetic drift be tested in the lab? linked sites can be especially important. appears randomly in a good genetic
In one experiment, Peter Buri evolved Most populations carry many recessive background rather than a bad one may
over 100 populations of Drosophila, deleterious mutations, each of which is be more important than genetic drift in
randomly choosing only eight males rare. During a sudden bottleneck, a small determining whether that allele persists.
and eight females to breed in each of number of those mutations become
19 generations. All the populations much more common. Inbreeding now So long as allele frequencies change
started with a 50% frequency of an eye creates homozygotes with two copies of randomly, does it matter why? It
color mutation. In half the populations, the mutation. This would generate lots would be nice if it didn't matter. In
the allele frequency went up, in half it of background selection at other sites that case the effects of selection at
went down. In other words, the allele on the same chromosome. For example, linked genes could be summarized by
was not under selection, allowing him if Buri's eye color mutation was on the one number, the effective population size Ne. That
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Current Biology Vol 21 No 20
R838

number may not be closely related to TVA compared with a control site.
the current number of individuals, but
Correspondence In contrast, a lower-level loudness
the mathematical theories of genetic judgment task was not differentially
drift could still work. But unfortunately, affected by site of stimulation.
the randomness associated Temporary Right Results imply that neural
with recombination has different
mathematical properties to the random
TMS impairs voice computations in the right TVA are
necessary for the distinction between
sampling of gametes (Figure 1). With detection human voices and other, non-vocal
background selection or hitchhiking, sounds.
if an allele frequency increases in one The human voice carries important
Patricia EG Bestelmeyer1,
generation, it is likely to increase again in non-linguistic messages about the
Pascal Belin2,3,
the next. This is because recombination emotional state, identity or gender of
and Marie-Helene Grosbras2
does not completely mix things up a speaker. This information is
every generation. With genetic drift, essential for everyday social
what happens in one generation has no Functional magnetic resonance interaction and thus makes vocal
connection to what happens in the next. imaging (fMRI) research has revealed sounds the most common and
Successive generations of genetic drift bilateral cortical regions along meaning of our environment.
mostly cancel each other out, so that the upper banks of the superior Neuroimaging studies have identified
over the long term, an allele undergoing temporal sulci (STS) which respond regions along the middle and anterior
genetic drift has much less variation in preferentially to voices compared to part of the STS with a preferential
its success than it would if it were linked non-vocal, environmental sounds [1,2] . neural response to vocal compared to
to other genes under selection. This sensitivity is particularly non-vocal sounds (the TVAs)
pronounced in the right hemisphere. [1]. Their early development [5],
Do these differences matter? If Voice perception models imply that ancient phylogenetic history [6],
genetic drift is not important, so these regions, referred to as the and crucially, preferential response to
evolution doesn't depend so much on temporal voice areas (TVAs), could vocalisations, even those devoid of
population size. The two theories also correspond to a first stage of voice linguistic content [1,7], suggest that
predict different distributions of allele specific processing in auditory cortex the TVAs might constitute a critical
frequencies. There may be many more [3,4], after which different types of node of the cerebral network involved in
consequences that we don't know vocal information are processed in voice cognitive abilities.
about yet: the theory of selection at interacting but partially independent However, the exact functional role of the
linked sites is still being worked out. functional pathways. However, clear TVAs and, particularly, whether their
causal evidence for this claim is greater fMRI response to voice indicates
Can we test whether drift is less missing. Here we provide the first a specific role in cerebral voice
important than selection at linked direct link between TVA activity processing, remains unclear.
sites? To test this directly in a setup like and voice detection ability using Our aim was to test a causal link
Buri's, one could look for a correlation repetitive transcranial magnetic between the right TVA and the ability to
between one generation and the stimulation (rTMS). Voice/non-voice discriminate voices from others
next in terms of the magnitude and discrimination ability was impaired sounds. To this end, we first located the
direction of change in allele frequency. when rTMS was targeted at the right right TVA in each subject with
In natural populations, there is lots
of indirect evidence supporting the
view that selection at linked sites is
more important than genetic drift.
For example, it is otherwise very hard
to explain why patterns of genetic
variation depend so little on population
size, and so much on differences
in the recombination rate along the
chromosome.

Where can I find out more?


Barton, N., Briggs, DEG, Eisen, JA, Goldstein, DB,
and Patel, NH (2007). Evolution. Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory Press. pp. 413–420.
Buri, P. (1956). Gene frequency in small populations
of mutant Drosophila. Evolution 10, 367–402.
Gillespie, J. H. (2001). Is the population size of a to
species relevant to its evolution? Evolution 55,
2161–2169.
Hahn, M. W. (2008). Toward a selection theory of Figure 1. Functional role of the TVA in voice/non-voice discrimination.
molecular evolution. Evolution 62, 255–265. (A) Illustration of stimulation sites. Individually located right temporal voice area (TVA) in network; control
site (supramarginal gyrus, SMG) in green. (B) Bar graph illustrates results of both tasks when stimulating
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary the TVA or the control site. Stimulating the TVA caused significantly poorer performance compared with
Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ the control site on the voice/non-voice discrimination task. The control task was not affected by rTMS at
85721, USA. either stimulation site. Error bars represent standard error of the mean.
Email: masel@u.arizona.edu

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