Literature DB >> 15944350

Epistasis in monkeyflowers.

John K Kelly1.   

Abstract

Epistasis contributes significantly to intrapopulation variation in floral morphology, development time, and male fitness components of Mimulus guttatus. This is demonstrated with a replicated line-cross experiment involving slightly over 7000 plants. The line-cross methodology is based on estimates for means. It thus has greater power than the variance partitioning approaches historically used to estimate epistasis within populations. The replication of the breeding design across many pairs of randomly extracted, inbred lines is necessary given the diversity of multilocus genotypes residing within an outbred deme. Male fitness is shown to exhibit synergistic epistasis, an accelerating decline in fitness with inbreeding. Synergism is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for a mutational deterministic hypothesis for the evolutionary maintenance of sexual reproduction. Unlike male fitness measures, flower morphology and development time yield positive evidence of epistasis but not of synergism. The results for these traits suggest that epistatic effects are variable across genetic backgrounds or sets of interacting loci.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15944350      PMCID: PMC1456113          DOI: 10.1534/genetics.105.041525

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  52 in total

1.  Dominance, epistasis and the genetics of postzygotic isolation.

Authors:  M Turelli; H A Orr
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  Deleterious mutations and genetic variation for flower size in Mimulus guttatus.

Authors:  J K Kelly; J H Willis
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 3.694

Review 3.  Quantitative trait locus analyses and the study of evolutionary process.

Authors:  David L Erickson; Charles B Fenster; Hans K Stenøien; Donald Price
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 6.185

4.  Studies on Hybrid Sterility. II. Localization of Sterility Factors in Drosophila Pseudoobscura Hybrids.

Authors:  T Dobzhansky
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1936-03       Impact factor: 4.562

5.  Epistasis in measured genotypes: Drosophila P-element insertions.

Authors:  A G Clark; L Wang
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 4.562

6.  teosinte branched1 and the origin of maize: evidence for epistasis and the evolution of dominance.

Authors:  J Doebley; A Stec; C Gustus
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 4.562

7.  Genetic and statistical analyses of strong selection on polygenic traits: what, me normal?

Authors:  M Turelli; N H Barton
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1994-11       Impact factor: 4.562

8.  Deleterious mutations as an evolutionary factor. II. Facultative apomixis and selfing.

Authors:  A S Kondrashov
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1985-11       Impact factor: 4.562

9.  Epistasis and the genetic divergence of photoperiodism between populations of the pitcher-plant mosquito, Wyeomyia smithii.

Authors:  J J Hard; W E Bradshaw; C M Holzapfel
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1992-06       Impact factor: 4.562

10.  Epistasis in maize (Zea mays L.) : 2. Genetic effects in crosses among early flint and dent inbred lines determined by three methods.

Authors:  A E Melchinger; H H Geiger; F W Schnell
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  1986-03       Impact factor: 5.699

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  16 in total

1.  Epistasis correlates to genomic complexity.

Authors:  Rafael Sanjuán; Santiago F Elena
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-09-18       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Testing the rare-alleles model of quantitative variation by artificial selection.

Authors:  John K Kelly
Journal:  Genetica       Date:  2007-07-03       Impact factor: 1.082

3.  Quantitative trait locus mapping of genes under selection across multiple years and sites in Avena barbata: epistasis, pleiotropy, and genotype-by-environment interactions.

Authors:  Robert G Latta; Kyle M Gardner; David A Staples
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2010-03-01       Impact factor: 4.562

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Authors:  John K Kelly; Julius P Mojica
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2011-09-16       Impact factor: 4.562

5.  Quantitative trait locus analysis of stage-specific inbreeding depression in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas.

Authors:  Louis V Plough; Dennis Hedgecock
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2011-09-21       Impact factor: 4.562

6.  A Segregating Inversion Generates Fitness Variation in Yellow Monkeyflower (Mimulus guttatus).

Authors:  Young Wha Lee; Lila Fishman; John K Kelly; John H Willis
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2016-02-11       Impact factor: 4.562

Review 7.  The causes of epistasis.

Authors:  J Arjan G M de Visser; Tim F Cooper; Santiago F Elena
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2011-10-05       Impact factor: 5.349

8.  Something old and something new: wedding recombinant inbred lines with traditional line cross analysis increases power to describe gene interactions.

Authors:  Tarek W Elnaccash; Stephen J Tonsor
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-04-16       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  The effect of gene interactions on the long-term response to selection.

Authors:  Tiago Paixão; Nicholas H Barton
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-04-04       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  The effect of purging on sexually selected traits through antagonistic pleiotropy with survival.

Authors:  Geir H Bolstad; Christophe Pélabon; Line-K Larsen; Ian A Fleming; Aslaug Viken; Gunilla Rosenqvist
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 2.912

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