Mani G S, Clarke B C
Department of Theoretical Physics, Schuster Laboratory, University of Manchester, U.K.
Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1990 May 22;240(1297):29-37. doi: 10.1098/rspb.1990.0025.
Computer simulations in which selection acts on a quantitative character show that the randomness of mutations can contribute significantly to evolutionary divergence between populations. In different populations, different advantageous mutations occur, and are selected to fixation, so that the populations diverge even when they are initially identical, and are subject to identical selection. This stochastic process is distinct from random genetic drift. In some circumstances (large populations or strong selection, or both) mutational order can be greatly more important than random drift in bringing about divergence. It can generate a 'disconnection' between evolution at the phenotypic and genotypic levels, and can give rise to a rough 'molecular clock', albeit episodic, that is driven by selection. In the absence of selection, mutational order has little or no effect.
对数量性状进行选择的计算机模拟表明,突变的随机性可显著促进种群间的进化分化。在不同种群中,会发生不同的有利突变,并被选择固定下来,因此即使种群最初相同且受到相同的选择,它们也会发生分化。这个随机过程不同于随机遗传漂变。在某些情况下(大种群或强选择,或两者皆有),突变顺序在导致分化方面可能比随机漂变重要得多。它可在表型和基因型水平的进化之间产生“脱节”,并可产生一个粗略的、由选择驱动的(尽管是间歇性的)“分子钟”。在没有选择的情况下,突变顺序几乎没有影响。