Moderating the neutralist–selectionist debate: exactly which propositions are we debating, and which arguments are valid?

Author:

de Jong Menno J.1ORCID,van Oosterhout Cock2ORCID,Hoelzel A. Rus3ORCID,Janke Axel145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Institute (SBiK‐F) Georg‐Voigt‐Strasse 14‐16 Frankfurt am Main 60325 Germany

2. Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Conservation University of East Anglia Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7TJ UK

3. Department of Biosciences Durham University South Road Durham DH1 3LE UK

4. Institute for Ecology, Evolution and Diversity Goethe University Max‐von‐Laue‐Strasse 9 Frankfurt am Main 60438 Germany

5. LOEWE‐Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (TBG) Senckenberg Nature Research Society Georg‐Voigt‐Straße 14‐16 Frankfurt am Main 60325 Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACTHalf a century after its foundation, the neutral theory of molecular evolution continues to attract controversy. The debate has been hampered by the coexistence of different interpretations of the core proposition of the neutral theory, the ‘neutral mutation–random drift’ hypothesis. In this review, we trace the origins of these ambiguities and suggest potential solutions. We highlight the difference between the original, the revised and the nearly neutral hypothesis, and re‐emphasise that none of them equates to the null hypothesis of strict neutrality. We distinguish the neutral hypothesis of protein evolution, the main focus of the ongoing debate, from the neutral hypotheses of genomic and functional DNA evolution, which for many species are generally accepted. We advocate a further distinction between a narrow and an extended neutral hypothesis (of which the latter posits that random non‐conservative amino acid substitutions can cause non‐ecological phenotypic divergence), and we discuss the implications for evolutionary biology beyond the domain of molecular evolution. We furthermore point out that the debate has widened from its initial focus on point mutations, and also concerns the fitness effects of large‐scale mutations, which can alter the dosage of genes and regulatory sequences. We evaluate the validity of neutralist and selectionist arguments and find that the tested predictions, apart from being sensitive to violation of underlying assumptions, are often derived from the null hypothesis of strict neutrality, or equally consistent with the opposing selectionist hypothesis, except when assuming molecular panselectionism. Our review aims to facilitate a constructive neutralist–selectionist debate, and thereby to contribute to answering a key question of evolutionary biology: what proportions of amino acid and nucleotide substitutions and polymorphisms are adaptive?

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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