Title of article
Competition at the Mouse t Complex: Rare Alleles Are Inherently Favored
Author/Authors
Michiel van Boven، نويسنده , , Franz J. Weissing، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
16
From page
343
To page
358
Abstract
We investigate the competition between alleles at a segregation distorter locus. The focus is on the invasion prospects of rare mutant distorter alleles in a population in which a wildtype and a resident distorter allele are present. The parameters are chosen to reflect the situation at the t complex of the house mouse, one of the best-studied examples of segregation distortion. By analyzing the invasion chances of rare alleles, we provide an analytical justification of earlier simulation results. We show that a new distorter allele can successfully invade even if it is inferior both at the gamete and at the individual level. In fact, newly arising distorter alleles have an inherent rareness advantage if their negative fitness consequences are restricted to homozygous condition. Likewise, rare mutant wildtype alleles may often invade even if their viability or fertility is reduced. As a consequence, the competition between alleles at a segregation distorter locus should lead to a high degree of polymorphism. We discuss the implications of this conclusion for the t complex of the house mouse and for the evolutionary stability of “honest” Mendelian segregation.
Keywords
T complex , SD complex , Drosophila melanogaster , Mendelian segregation , mathematicalmodel. , meiotic drive , Shaw–Mohler equation , invadability , rarenessadvantage , Segregation distortion
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Record number
773622
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