Literature DB >> 3666444

Dominance, pleiotropy and metabolic structure.

P D Keightley1, H Kacser.   

Abstract

It is a common observation that most mutants have similar dominance relations for all the characters they are known to affect. As a model of pleiotropic effects we investigate a branched pathway where the two outputs represent two characters whose variation is affected by changes in any of the genetically specified enzymes in the system. We consider the effects on the phenotype (fluxes or intermediate metabolites) of substitutions at one locus represented by enzyme activities of the two homozygotes (mutant and wild type) and that of the heterozygote. Dominance indices for the characters pleiotropically connected by the metabolic system are calculated. We show that if enzymes behave 'linearly,' (first order), that is if saturation and feedback inhibition or other nonlinearities are absent, all fluxes and pools have identical dominance relations. The presence of such nonlinearity, however, leads to differences in dominance between different characters and we define the conditions where such differences can be important.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3666444      PMCID: PMC1203207     

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


  15 in total

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5.  Metabolic control and its analysis. Additional relationships between elasticities and control coefficients.

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6.  The control of enzyme systems in vivo: elasticity analysis of the steady state.

Authors:  H Kacser
Journal:  Biochem Soc Trans       Date:  1983-01       Impact factor: 5.407

7.  Control of the flux in the arginine pathway of Neurospora crassa. The flux from citrulline to arginine.

Authors:  H J Flint; D J Porteous; H Kacser
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8.  The control of flux.

Authors:  H Kacser; J A Burns
Journal:  Symp Soc Exp Biol       Date:  1973

9.  The molecular basis of dominance.

Authors:  H Kacser; J A Burns
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1981 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 4.562

10.  Enzyme variation, metabolic flux and fitness: alcohol dehydrogenase in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  R J Middleton; H Kacser
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1983-11       Impact factor: 4.562

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  31 in total

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4.  Evolution of dominance in metabolic pathways.

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5.  The effect of antagonistic pleiotropy on the estimation of the average coefficient of dominance of deleterious mutations.

Authors:  B Fernández; A García-Dorado; A Caballero
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6.  Inferences about the distribution of dominance drawn from yeast gene knockout data.

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7.  What can genetic variation tell us about the evolution of senescence?

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8.  Genetic improvement of production while maintaining fitness.

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9.  The inheritance of metabolic flux: expressions for the within-sibship mean and variance given the parental genotypes.

Authors:  P J Ward
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1990-07       Impact factor: 4.562

10.  P-element-induced variation in metabolic regulation in Drosophila.

Authors:  A G Clark; L Wang; T Hulleberg
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1995-01       Impact factor: 4.562

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