是什么维持了自然种群的遗传变异?罗素·兰德(Russell Lande)对“通过连锁位点的多基因特征突变维持遗传变异性”的评论。

P. Phillips
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引用次数: 6

摘要

数量遗传学的“芝加哥学派”在20世纪后半叶主导了大部分进化思想,它起源于20世纪70年代初的哈佛大学。正是在这段时间里,作为理查德·列万廷实验室的研究生,拉斯·兰德开始了一系列的论文,这些论文最终塑造了我们对复杂特征进化的思考方式。兰德的研究生生涯始于对理论生态学的兴趣,但很快他就被激励着将g·g·辛普森关于大规模进化模式的观点转化为休厄尔·赖特提出的群体遗传学的形式主义。这些方法的融合在数量遗传学中找到了它们的联系,这使得朗德能够精确地制定进化变化的方程,从而有可能用经验数据挑战他的理论结果。在两组平行的论文中,Lande阐述了对选择的反应理论和对单一性状(Lande, 1976 a, b)和对相关性状(Lande, 1979, 1980, 1984)的遗传变异维持理论,前者构成了他的论文工作的核心。与他和史蒂夫·阿诺德在选择分析方面的工作(兰德和阿诺德,1983年)一起,这一理论为理解性状的进化提供了一个连贯的系统,这些性状的变异和协方差模式足够稳定,以至于这种变异背后的精确遗传细节基本上可以被忽略。在这种条件下,这种抽象是可能的,这是兰德1976年发表在《基因研究》上的开创性论文的一部分重点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
What maintains genetic variation in natural populations? A commentary on 'The maintenance of genetic variability by mutation in a polygenic character with linked loci' by Russell Lande.
The ‘ Chicago School’ of quantitative genetics that dominated much of evolutionary thinking in the later part of the twentieth century had its genesis at Harvard in the early 1970s. It was during this time as a graduate student in Richard Lewontin’s laboratory that Russ Lande began a series of papers that would end up shaping much of the way we think about the evolution of complex traits. Lande began his graduate career with an interest in theoretical ecology but was soon motivated to translate G. G. Simpson’s ideas about large-scale patterns in evolution into the formalism of population genetics developed by Sewall Wright. The merging of these approaches found their nexus in quantitative genetics, which allowed Lande to precisely formulate equations for evolutionary change in a way that made it possible to challenge his theoretical results with empirical data. In two parallel sets of papers, Lande laid out the theory of the response to selection and the maintenance of genetic variation for both single traits (Lande, 1976 a, b) and for suites of correlated characters (Lande, 1979, 1980, 1984), with the former forming the core of his dissertation work. Together with his and Steve Arnold’s work on the analysis of selection (Lande & Arnold, 1983), this theory provides a coherent system for understanding the evolution of traits whose patterns of variance and covariance are stable enough that the precise genetic details underlying this variation can essentially be ignored. The conditions under which this kind of abstraction is possible is part of the focus of Lande’s seminal paper in Genetical Research published in 1976 (Lande, 1976a).
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