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Linkage disequilibrium and genetic variances under mutation-selection balance.
Author(s) -
Alan Hastings
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
genetics.
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
ISSN - 3049-7094
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/121.4.857
Subject(s) - biology , linkage disequilibrium , genetics , disequilibrium , epistasis , mutation rate , locus (genetics) , selection (genetic algorithm) , dominance (genetics) , evolutionary biology , haplotype , allele , gene , medicine , artificial intelligence , computer science , ophthalmology
I determine the contribution of linkage disequilibrium to genetic variances using results for two loci and for induced or marginal systems. The analysis allows epistasis and dominance, but assumes that mutation is weak relative to selection. The linkage disequilibrium component of genetic variance is shown to be unimportant for unlinked loci if the gametic mutation rate divided by the harmonic mean of the pairwise recombination rates is much less than one. For tightly linked loci, linkage disequilibrium is unimportant if the gametic mutation rate divided by the (induced) per locus selection is much less than one.

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