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Information About

Mutation-selection Balance




first derived in the 1920's by John Burdon Sanderson Haldane and Ronald Fisher .

A genetic variant that is deleterious will not necessarily disappear immediately from a
population. Its frequency, when it first appears in a population of N individuals, will
be 1/N (or 1/2N in a Diploid population), and this frequency might drift up and down a
bit before returning to zero. If the population is large enough, or if the Mutation
  • N is high enough, then one has to consider additional

  • mutations. In a hypothetical infinite population, the frequency will never return to

zero. Instead, it will reach an equilibrium value that reflects the balance between
mutation (pushing the frequency upward) and Selection (pushing it downward), thus
the name mutation-selection balance.

If s is the deleterious selection coefficient (the decrease in relative fitness), then the equilibrium frequency f of an Allele in mutation-selection balance is approximately f = u/s in haploids, or for the case of a dominant allele in diploids. For a recessive allele in
a diploid population, f = (u/s)^0.5. A useful approximation for
alleles of intermediate dominance is that f ~ u/(sh), where h is the coefficient of
dominance. These formulas all are approximate because
they ignore back-mutation, typically a trivial effect.

The Mutation-selection Balance has the practical use of allowing estimates of
mutation rates from data on deleterious alleles (see examples on pp. 85-89 of Crow, 1986).
For population geneticists, it provides a simple model for thinking about how
variation persists in natural populations.


EXTERNAL LINKS


  • http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/ridley/a-z/Mutation-selection_balance.asp

  • J. F. Crow, Basic concepts in population, quantitative, and evolutionary genetics (w.H. Freeman, New York, 1986), pp. 273.