The Causes of Molecular EvolutionOxford University Press, 1991 - 336 páginas This work provides a unified theory that addresses the important problem of the origin and maintenance of genetic variation in natural populations. With modern molecular techniques, variation is found in all species, sometimes at astonishingly high levels. Yet, despite these observations, the forces that maintain variation within and between species have been difficult subjects of study. Because they act very weakly and operate over vast time scales, scientists must rely on indirect inferences and speculative mathematical models. However, despite these obstacles, many advances have been made. The author's research in molecular genetics, evolution, and bio-mathematics has enabled him to draw on this work, and present a coherent and valuable view of the field. The book is divided into three parts. The first consists of three chapters on protein evolution, DNA evolution, and molecular mechanisms. This section reviews the experimental observations on genetic variation. The second part gives a unified treatment of the mathematical theory of selection in a fluctuating environment. The final two chapters combine the earlier assessments in a treatment of the scientific status of two competing theories for the maintenance of genetic variation. Steeped in the enormous advances population genetics has made over the past 25 years, this book will be of interest to human geneticists, biologists, evolutionary theorists, and bio-mathematicians. |
Conteúdo
1 Protein evolution | 3 |
2 DNA evolution | 64 |
3 The molecular clock | 105 |
4 Selection in a fluctuating environment | 142 |
5 SSWM approximations | 231 |
6 Neutral allele theories | 261 |
7 Selection theories | 291 |
References | 306 |
329 | |
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Termos e frases comuns
allele frequencies amino acid amino acid substitutions approaches zero approximation assumption asymptotic autocorrelation Biol boundary layer c-haploid model codon codon usage constant correlation diploid Dirichlet distribution Drosophila dynamics enzymes equation equilibrium estimate Evol example exponentially distributed function generation-time effect genes genetic drift genome genotypes haploid hemoglobin heterozygosity homozygosity illustrated in Figure index of dispersion insulin integral interior alleles isochores Kimura kinetic lineage effects loci locus mammals mean number melanogaster moderately selected molecular evolution mutation rate neutral model neutral theory nucleotide number of alleles number of mutations number of substitutions occur overdominance parameters point processes Poisson process polymorphism population genetics probability protein pseudogenes random variables rare alleles rate of evolution rate of substitution region replacement substitutions rodents sample SAS-CFF model scale segregating alleles sequence silent substitutions species SSWM stationary distribution stochastic studies Table temperature tion two-allele variance variation weak-selection