Mutation and the evolution of recombination
- 27 April 2010
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 365 (1544) , 1281-1294
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2009.0320
Abstract
Under the classical view, selection depends more or less directly on mutation: standing genetic variance is maintained by a balance between selection and mutation, and adaptation is fuelled by new favourable mutations. Recombination is favoured if it breaks negative associations among selected alleles, which interfere with adaptation. Such associations may be generated by negative epistasis, or by random drift (leading to the Hill–Robertson effect). Both deterministic and stochastic explanations depend primarily on the genomic mutation rate,U. This may be large enough to explain high recombination rates in some organisms, but seems unlikely to be so in general. Random drift is a more general source of negative linkage disequilibria, and can cause selection for recombination even in large populations, through the chance loss of new favourable mutations. The rate of species-wide substitutions is much too low to drive this mechanism, but local fluctuations in selection, combined with gene flow, may suffice. These arguments are illustrated by comparing the interaction between good and bad mutations at unlinked loci under the infinitesimal model.Keywords
This publication has 114 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of the genome sequences of three Drosophila melanogaster spontaneous mutation accumulation linesGenome Research, 2009
- Genetic Recombination and Molecular EvolutionCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 2009
- The effects of deleterious mutations on evolution in non-recombining genomesTrends in Genetics, 2008
- A genome-wide view of the spectrum of spontaneous mutations in yeastProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- No effect of recombination on the efficacy of natural selection in primatesGenome Research, 2008
- The traveling-wave approach to asexual evolution: Muller's ratchet and speed of adaptationTheoretical Population Biology, 2007
- Ubiquitous selective constraints in the Drosophila genome revealed by a genome-wide interspecies comparisonGenome Research, 2006
- Inferring the distribution of mutational effects on fitness inDrosophilaBiology Letters, 2006
- Evidence for Widespread Degradation of Gene Control Regions in Hominid GenomesPLoS Biology, 2005
- Reduced adaptation of a non-recombining neo-Y chromosomeNature, 2002