The rate of beneficial mutations surfing on the wave of a range expansion
Remi Lehe, Oskar Hallatschek, Luca Peliti

TL;DR
This study investigates how beneficial mutations successfully surf on the wave of a range expansion, revealing the interplay between mutation location, fitness advantage, and genetic drift in adaptation.
Contribution
The paper introduces an analytic model predicting the frequency of beneficial mutations fixing at invasion fronts, considering spatial factors and genetic drift effects.
Findings
Beneficial mutations are more likely to surf near the wave tip.
The probability of surfing increases with the mutant's fitness and spatial head start.
Genetic drift enhances the fixation rate of beneficial mutations at the front.
Abstract
Many theoretical and experimental studies suggest that range expansions can have severe consequences for the gene pool of the expanding population. Due to strongly enhanced genetic drift at the advancing frontier, neutral and weakly deleterious mutations can reach large frequencies in the newly colonized regions, as if they were surfing the front of the range expansion. These findings raise the question of how frequently beneficial mutations successfully surf at shifting range margins, thereby promoting adaptation towards a range-expansion phenotype. Here, we use individual-based simulations to study the surfing statistics of recurrent beneficial mutations on wave-like range expansions in linear habitats. We show that the rate of surfing depends on two strongly antagonistic factors, the probability of surfing given the spatial location of a novel mutation and the rate of occurrence of…
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