Title of article
The flux-summation theorem and the ‘evolution of dominance’
Author/Authors
Agutter، نويسنده , , Paul S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
5
From page
821
To page
825
Abstract
The flux-summation theorem (FST) is a central principle of metabolic control analysis. It describes how the control of flux through any metabolic pathway of arbitrary complexity is distributed among the component reaction steps. Two issues concerning the FST are discussed in this paper. First, it has been suggested that the theorem could, in principle, be inapplicable under certain conditions, i.e. the sum of the control coefficients of all the enzymes supporting a pathway could exceed unity. Such conditions have not been found in any species so far studied, so in practice the FST is always applicable. I argue that applicability of the FST is a precondition for phenotypic robustness and therefore for survival. Second, the FST provides a basis for explaining dominance that renders Fisherʹs ‘modifier genes’ hypothesis otiose. Some recent misunderstandings of metabolic control analysis have led to the claim that this explanation is flawed and therefore that Fisherʹs hypothesis can and should be reinstated. Here, these suggestions are refuted.
Keywords
Modifier genes , Metabolic Control Analysis , Flux-summation theorem , Control coefficient , Phenotypic robustness , dominance
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1539469
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