Abstract
Summary When a selectively favourable gene substitution occurs in a population, changes in gene frequencies will occur at closely linked loci. In the case of a neutral polymorphism, average heterozygosity will be reduced to an extent which varies with distance from the substituted locus. The aggregate effect of substitution on neutral polymorphism is estimated; in populations of total size 10 6 or more (and perhaps of 10 4 or more), this effect will be more important than that of random fixation. This may explain why the extent of polymorphism in natural populations does not vary as much as one would expect from a consideration of the equilibrium between mutation and random fixation in populations of different sizes. For a selectively maintained polymorphism at a linked locus, this process will only be important in the long run if it leads to complete fixation. If the selective coefficients at the linked locus are small compared to those at the substituted locus, it is shown that the probability of complete fixation at the linked locus is approximately exp (− Nc ), where c is the recombinant fraction and N the population size. It follows that in a large population a selective substitution can occur in a cistron without eliminating a selectively maintained polymorphism in the same cistron.
Keywords
MeSH Terms
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Fitting Discrete Probability Distributions to Evolutionary Events
The assumptions underlying the use of the Poisson distribution are essentially that the probability of an event is small but nearly identical for all occurrences and that the oc...
Natural Selection and Mutation Rates in Mammals
Rates of fixation of amino acid substitutions were calculated for 13 amino acid positions of fibrinopeptides A and B. These positions were selected because they had sustained fi...
The effect of deleterious mutations on neutral molecular variation.
Abstract Selection against deleterious alleles maintained by mutation may cause a reduction in the amount of genetic variability at linked neutral sites. This is because a new n...
Direct estimates of human per nucleotide mutation rates at 20 loci causing mendelian diseases
I estimate per nucleotide rates of spontaneous mutations of different kinds in humans directly from the data on per locus mutation rates and on sequences of de novo nonsense nuc...
THE NUMBER OF ALLELES THAT CAN BE MAINTAINED IN A FINITE POPULATION
T has sometimes been suggested that the wild-type allele is not a single entity, I but rather a population of different isoalleles that are indistinguishable by any ordinary pro...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1974
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 23
- Issue
- 1
- Pages
- 23-35
- Citations
- 3482
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1017/s0016672300014634
- PMID
- 4407212