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Journal ArticleDOI

The relation of recombination to mutational advance.

Hermann J. Muller
- 01 May 1964 - 
- Vol. 106, Iss: 1, pp 2-9
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TLDR
It is shown that this calculation does not apply for mutant genes that act advantageously only when in some special combinations with one or more other mutant genes, and that as far as these cases of special synergism are concerned recombining lines have no evolutionary advantage over non-recombining ones.
Abstract
The method of calculation is shown wherebt a formula has been derived that approximately the ratio of the rate of accumulation of advantageous mutant genes in a population that undergoes recombination to the rate in an otherwise non-recombining one. A table is given showing the ratios thus found for different frequencies of advantageous mutations and different degrees of their advantage. It is shown that this calculation does not apply for mutant genes that act advantageously only when in some special combinations with one or more other mutant genes, and that as far as these cases of special synergism are concerned recombining lines have no evolutionary advantage over non-recombining ones. Other limitations of the formula are pointed out and assessed. It is explained that most factors that retard the rate of recombination—for expample, linkage, rarity of outbreeding, intercalation of sexual reproduction between more frequent cycles of sexual propagation, and partial isolation between subpopulations—must usually cause little long-term retardation of the speed of advance that is fostered by recombination. Moreover, even where long-term evolutions has virtually ceased, recombination of mutant genes still confers upon a population the means of adopting short-term genetic “dodges”, that adjust it to ecological and “physical” changes in its circumstances, much more rapidly than would be possible for a comparable asexual population. Under conditions where only stability of type is needed, a non-recombining does not actually degenerate as a result of an excess of mutation over selection, after the usual equilibrium between these pressures is reached. However, a irreversible ratchet mechanism exists in the non-recombining species (unlike the recombining ones) that prevents selection, even if intensified, from reducing the mutational loads below the lightest that were in existence when the intensified selection started, whereas, contrariwise, “drift”, and what might be called “selective noise” must allow occasional slips of the lightest loads in the direction of increased weight.

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Citations
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Survey of the temporal changes in HIV-1 replicative fitness in the Amsterdam Cohort.

TL;DR: It is observed that the bottleneck, occurring with each transmission event, does not completely reset the fitness increase acquired during disease progression, and there is a trend of increasing fitness over time in the HIV epidemic of Amsterdam.
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Nucleotide Polymorphism and Within-Gene Recombination in Daphnia magna and D. pulex, Two Cyclical Parthenogens

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined patterns of nucleotide diversity at eight nuclear loci in continentwide samples of two species of cyclically parthenogenetic Daphnia to assess the effect of partial asexual reproduction on effective population size and amount of recombination.
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Population structure, levels of selection, and the evolution of intracellular symbionts.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that substitution rates will increase, and the effect of those substitutions on endosymbiont fitness will become more deleterious as horizontal transmission among hosts decreases, and there is a critical level of horizontal transmission below which natural selection cannot effectively purge deleteriously mutations, leading to an expected loss of fitness over time.
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Evolution of drift robustness in small populations.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated through a mathematical model and simulations that small populations tend to evolve to drift-robust fitness peaks, which have a low likelihood of slightly-deleterious mutations.
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The Two Faces of Mutation: Extinction and Adaptation in RNA Viruses

TL;DR: Experimental evidence for the effects of mutation, selection, and genetic drift on the adaptation and extinction of RNA viruses is reviewed.
References
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Some Genetic Aspects of Sex

TL;DR: There is no basic biological reason why reproduction, variation and evolution can not go indefinitely without sexuality or sex; therefore, sex is not, in an absolute sense, a necessity, it is a "luxury."
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Our load of mutations.

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Evolution by mutation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a mathematical treatment of biological evolution and its mechanism, which is not possible for me to represent the high tradition of Josiah Willard Gibbs by offering you a Mathematical Treatment.