Two steps forward, one step back: the pleiotropic effects of favoured alleles
- 7 April 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 271 (1540) , 705-714
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2003.2635
Abstract
Pleiotropy is one of the most commonly observed attributes of genes. Yet the extent and influence of pleiotropy have been underexplored in population genetics models. In this paper, I quantify the extent to which pleiotropy inhibits the spread of alleles in response to directional selection on a focal trait. Under the assumption that pleiotropic effects are extensive and deleterious, the fraction of alleles that are beneficial overall is severely limited by pleiotropy and rises nearly linearly with the strength of directional selection on the focal trait. Over a broad class of distribution of pleiotropic effects, the mean selective effect of those alleles that are beneficial overall is halved, on average, by pleiotropy. The fraction of new mutant alleles that are beneficial overall and that succeed in fixing within a population is even more severely limited when directional selection is weak, but it rises quadratically with the strength of directional selection. Finally, the mean selective effect of mutant alleles that are beneficial and succeed in fixing is reduced by one–third, on average, by pleiotropy. These results help to shape our understanding of the evolutionary inertia caused by pleiotropy.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- TOWARD A REALISTIC MODEL OF MUTATIONS AFFECTING FITNESSEvolution, 2003
- Faculty Opinions recommendation of Pleiotropic model of maintenance of quantitative genetic variation at mutation-selection balance.Published by H1 Connect ,2002
- A Population Genetics Model for Multiple Quantitative Traits Exhibiting Pleiotropy and EpistasisJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2000
- The evolutionary genetics of adaptation: a simulation studyGenetics Research, 1999
- Adaptive Inertia Caused by Hidden Pleiotropic EffectsTheoretical Population Biology, 1997
- Variation maintained in quantitative traits with mutation–selection balance: pleiotropic side-effects on fitness traitsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1990
- The effect of linkage on limits to artificial selectionGenetics Research, 1966
- An experimental check on quantitative genetical theory I. Short-term responses to selectionJournal of Genetics, 1957
- The effect of selection against extreme deviants based on deviation or on homozygosisJournal of Genetics, 1956
- A Mathematical Theory of Natural and Artificial Selection, Part V: Selection and MutationMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1927