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Daniel M. Weinreich

Researcher at Brown University

Publications -  76
Citations -  6307

Daniel M. Weinreich is an academic researcher from Brown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epistasis & Natural selection. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 68 publications receiving 5782 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel M. Weinreich include City of Hope National Medical Center & Harvard University.

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Darwinian evolution can follow only very few mutational paths to fitter proteins.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that 102 mutational trajectories linking β-lactamase alleles are inaccessible to Darwinian selection and that many of the remaining trajectories have negligible probabilities of realization, which implies that the protein tape of life may be largely reproducible and even predictable.
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Missense meanderings in sequence space: a biophysical view of protein evolution

TL;DR: This work reviews the literature on biophysics as it relates to molecular evolution and advances a biophysical model of protein evolution that helps to understand phenomena that range from the dynamics of molecular adaptation to the clock-like rate ofprotein evolution.
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Empirical fitness landscapes reveal accessible evolutionary paths

TL;DR: This work presents the first view on empirical evolutionary landscapes, which can be reconstructed in the laboratory, and asks why particular evolutionary paths are taken.
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Perspective:sign epistasis and genetic constraint on evolutionary trajectories

TL;DR: Sign epistasis as discussed by the authors is the consequence of a particular form of epistasis, which is referred to as sign epistasis for fitness, which means that the sign of the fitness effect of a mutation is under epistatic control.

Sign epistasis and genetic constraint on evolutionary trajectories

TL;DR: The theoretical and empirical considerations imply that strong genetic constraint on the selective accessibility of trajectories to high fitness genotypes may exist and suggest specific areas of investigation for future research.