Massively parallel experimental interrogation of natural variants in ancient signaling pathways reveals both purifying selection and local adaptation
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The nature of standing genetic variation remains a central debate in population genetics, with differing perspectives on whether common variants are mostly neutral or have functional effects. We address this question by directly mapping the fitness effects of over 9,000 natural variants in the Ras/PKA and TOR/Sch9 pathways—key regulators of cell proliferation in eukaryotes—across four conditions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae . While many variants are neutral in our assay, on the order of 3,500 exhibited significant fitness effects. These non-neutral variants tend to be missense and affect conserved, more densely packed, and less solvent-exposed protein regions. They are also typically younger, occur at lower frequencies, and more often found in heterozygous states, suggesting they are subject to purifying selection. A substantial fraction of non-neutral variants showing strong fitness effects in our experiments, however, is present at high frequencies in the population. These variants show signs of local adaptation as they tend to be found specifically in domesticated strains adapted to human-made environments. Our findings support the view that while common variants are often neutral, a significant proportion have adaptive functional consequences and are driven into the population by local positive selection. This study highlights the potential to explore the functional effects of natural genetic variation on a genome scale with quantitative fitness measurements in the laboratory, bridging the gap between population genetics and functional genomics to understand evolutionary dynamics in the wild.