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Heterosis: Many Genes, Many Mechanisms—End the Search for an Undiscovered Unifying Theory
Author(s) -
Shawn M. Kaeppler
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
isrn botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2090-8598
DOI - 10.5402/2012/682824
Subject(s) - heterosis , biology , epistasis , genetics , gene , context (archaeology) , allele , evolutionary biology , computational biology , hybrid , paleontology , botany
Heterosis is the increase in vigor that is observed in progenies of matings of diverse individuals from different species, isolated populations, or selected strains within species or populations. Heterosis has been of immense economic value in agriculture and has important implications regarding the fitness and fecundity of individuals in natural populations. Genetic models based on complementation of deleterious alleles, especially in the context of linkage and epistasis, are consistent with many observed manifestations of heterosis. The search for the genes and alleles that underlie heterosis, as well as for broader allele-independent, genomewide mechanisms, has encompassed many species and systems. Common themes across these studies indicate that sequence diversity is necessary but not sufficient to produce heterotic phenotypes, and that the molecular pathways that produce heterosis involve chromatin modification, transcriptional control, translation and protein processing, and interactions between and within developmental and biochemical pathways. Taken together, there are many and diverse molecular mechanisms that translate DNA into phenotype, and it is the combination of all these mechanisms across many genes that produce heterosis in complex traits.

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