The distribution of mutation effects on viability in Drosophila melanogaster
- PMID: 7896110
- PMCID: PMC1206267
- DOI: 10.1093/genetics/138.4.1315
The distribution of mutation effects on viability in Drosophila melanogaster
Abstract
Parameters of continuous distributions of effects and rates of spontaneous mutation for relative viability in Drosophila are estimated by maximum likelihood from data of two published experiments on accumulation of mutations on protected second chromosomes. A model of equal mutant effects gives a poor fit to the data of the two experiments; higher likelihoods are obtained with leptokurtic distributions or for models in which there is more than one class of mutation effect. Minimum estimates of mutation rates (events per generation) at polygenes affecting viability on chromosome 2 are 0.14 and 0.068, but estimates are strongly confounded with other parameters in the model. Separate information on rates of molecular divergence between Drosophila species and from rates of movement of transposable elements is used to infer the overall genomic mutation rate in Drosophila, and the viability data are analyzed with mutation rate as a known parameter. If, for example, a mutation rate for chromosome 2 of 0.4 is assumed, maximum likelihood estimates of mean mutant effect on relative viability are 0.4% and 1%, but the majority of mutations have very much smaller effects than these values as distributions are highly leptokurtic. The methodology is applied to estimate viability effects of single P element insertional mutations. The mean effect per insertion is found to be higher, and their distribution is found to be less leptokurtic than for spontaneous mutations. The equilibrium genetic variance of viability predicted by a mutation-selection balance model with parameters estimated from the mutation accumulation experiments is similar to laboratory estimates of genetic variance of viability from natural populations of Drosophila.
Similar articles
-
The mutation rate and the distribution of mutational effects of viability and fitness in Drosophila melanogaster.Genetica. 1998;102-103(1-6):255-65. Genetica. 1998. PMID: 9720284
-
EMS-induced polygenic mutation rates for nine quantitative characters in Drosophila melanogaster.Genetics. 1998 Feb;148(2):753-66. doi: 10.1093/genetics/148.2.753. Genetics. 1998. PMID: 9504922 Free PMC article.
-
New estimates of the rates and effects of mildly deleterious mutation in Drosophila melanogaster.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Jan 19;96(2):574-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.96.2.574. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999. PMID: 9892675 Free PMC article.
-
Transposable elements and fitness in Drosophila melanogaster.Genome. 1989;31(1):284-95. doi: 10.1139/g89-046. Genome. 1989. PMID: 2556325 Review.
-
Accumulation of transposable elements in laboratory lines of Drosophila melanogaster.Genetica. 1997;100(1-3):167-75. Genetica. 1997. PMID: 9440270 Review.
Cited by
-
Spontaneous deleterious mutation in Arabidopsis thaliana.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Sep 28;96(20):11393-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.96.20.11393. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999. PMID: 10500187 Free PMC article.
-
Understanding the evolutionary fate of finite populations: the dynamics of mutational effects.PLoS Biol. 2007 Apr;5(4):e94. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050094. PLoS Biol. 2007. PMID: 17407380 Free PMC article.
-
Deleterious mutations and the genetic variance of male fitness components in Mimulus guttatus.Genetics. 2003 Jul;164(3):1071-85. doi: 10.1093/genetics/164.3.1071. Genetics. 2003. PMID: 12871916 Free PMC article.
-
Mutant alleles of small effect are primarily responsible for the loss of fitness with slow inbreeding in Drosophila melanogaster.Genetics. 1998 Mar;148(3):1143-58. doi: 10.1093/genetics/148.3.1143. Genetics. 1998. PMID: 9539431 Free PMC article.
-
Pleiotropy can be effectively estimated without counting phenotypes through the rank of a genotype-phenotype map.Genetics. 2014 Aug;197(4):1357-63. doi: 10.1534/genetics.114.164673. Epub 2014 Jun 3. Genetics. 2014. PMID: 24899162 Free PMC article.
References
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Molecular Biology Databases