Ayala F J, Gilpin M E
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1974 Dec;71(12):4847-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.71.12.4847.
The hypothesis has been advanced that the pervasive protein variation found in natural populations of many organisms is adaptively neutral, and thus not subject to natural selection. This neutrality hypothesis predicts that at polymorphic gene loci different configurations of allelic frequencies will occur in different species. Results of an extensive study of protein variation in several species of Drosophila show that any two species have very similar allelic frequencies at a substantial proportion of all gene loci, while at many other loci the species have very different sets of alleles. Genetic distances have been calculated between pairs of subspecies, morphologically similar species, and morphologically different species. The distribution of genetic distances is strikingly different from the predictions of the neutrality theory. Protein variation appears to be maintained by natural selection.
有一种假说认为,在许多生物的自然种群中发现的普遍存在的蛋白质变异是适应性中性的,因此不受自然选择的影响。这种中性假说预测,在多态基因座上,不同的等位基因频率配置会在不同物种中出现。对几种果蝇蛋白质变异的广泛研究结果表明,任何两个物种在所有基因座的很大一部分上具有非常相似的等位基因频率,而在许多其他基因座上,这些物种具有非常不同的等位基因组合。已经计算了亚种对、形态相似物种对和形态不同物种对之间的遗传距离。遗传距离的分布与中性理论的预测明显不同。蛋白质变异似乎是由自然选择维持的。