from Part III - Evolution: the time dimension in populations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
In the domesticated animal all variations have an equal chance of continuance; and those which would decidely render a wild animal unable to compete … are no disadvantage whatever …
A. R. Wallace, ‘On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart Indefinitely from the Original Type’ (1858)Survival of the luckiest.
M. Kimura (1989)We have seen how to infer that genes have various effects on a trait, but how does the spectrum of genetic effects arise, and how is the variation distributed over space and time? This chapter provides a brief travelog of some of the relevant concepts of population genetics, the theoretical basis of evolutionary biology {Crow, 1986; Hartl and Clark, 1989; Hedrick, 1985; Li and Graur, 1990; Nei, 1987}. These concepts are used in subsequent chapters.
Life is fundamentally stochastic: the fate of a new mutation
(Nearly) each new mutation is unique
For most of this century it was thought that only a few alleles could exist at a locus, of which new copies arose via recurrent mutation at some rate, generally estimated to be about 10-5 per locus per generation, providing a continual supply of a given allele. This view was based on phenotype data, but at the sequence level the probability that the same mutation will recur is very small. Think of a cistron (coding stretch) of, say, a thousand nucleotides. Three thousand different non-synonymous (nucleotidechanging) point mutations are possible.
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