Balanced Polymorphisms and the Evolution of Dominance

@article{Otto1999BalancedPA,
  title={Balanced Polymorphisms and the Evolution of Dominance},
  author={Sarah Perin Otto and Denis Bourguet},
  journal={The American Naturalist},
  year={1999},
  volume={153},
  pages={561 - 574}
}
We explore the evolution of dominance at polymorphisms maintained either by overdominant selection or by migration‐selection balance. At such balanced polymorphisms, heterozygotes remain at appreciable frequencies over long periods of time, allowing extensive modification of dominance to occur. The strength of selection favoring a modifier of dominance is roughly proportional to the probability that a modifier allele is found in a heterozygote at the locus subject to balancing selection times… 
ASSORTATIVE MATE CHOICE AND DOMINANCE MODIFICATION: ALTERNATIVE WAYS OF REMOVING HETEROZYGOTE DISADVANTAGE
TLDR
This work derives invasion fitness of mutants introducing dominance or assortative mate choice in a randomly mating population with a genetic polymorphism for an ecological trait from the results of a symmetric resource-competition model.
Dominance reversals and the maintenance of genetic variation for fitness
TLDR
Tory arguments and data supporting a role for dominance reversals in the maintenance of genetic variation are reviewed and an illuminating new study is highlighted, which reports a genome-wide signal of dominance reversal between male and female fitness in seed beetles.
Migration-Selection Balance at Multiple Loci and Selection on Dominance and Recombination
TLDR
This novel method gives a close approximation to the simulation with all possible multilocus genotypes considered and finds that the modifiers of the (i) type are able to invade faster than the type (ii) modifier, however, this result only applies in the strong selection/low migration/low recombination scenario.
The evolution of dominance
TLDR
The evolution of dominance has been subject to intensive debate since Fisher first argued that modifiers would be selected for if they made wild-type alleles more dominant over mutant alleles, and there is reason to believe that dominance relationships have been moulded by natural selection to some extent.
Evolution of dominance under frequency-dependent intraspecific competition.
The Evolution of Sex-Specific Dominance in Response to Sexually Antagonistic Selection
TLDR
A mathematical model is presented that shows that sexually specific dominance modification is a potential outcome of sexually antagonistic selection and predicts that loci with higher levels of sexual conflict should exhibit greater differentiation between males and females in levels of dominance and that the strength of antagonism selection experienced by one sex should be proportional to the level of dominance modification.
Genetic architecture and balancing selection: the life and death of differentiated variants
TLDR
This work highlights how balancing selection can favour specific features in the genetic architecture and review the evolutionary and molecular mechanisms shaping this architecture, and stresses the need for both functional and ecological studies to characterize the evolutionary mechanisms operating in these systems.
Overdominance interacts with linkage to determine the rate of adaptation to a new optimum
TLDR
This work model how overdominant polymorphisms can reduce the evolvability of diploid populations, uncovering a novel form of epistatic constraint on adaptation and predicting a source of stochastic variability in eukaryotic evolution experiments or cases of rapid evolution in nature.
EVOLUTION OF DOMINANCE UNDER FREQUENCY‐DEPENDENT INTRASPECIFIC COMPETITION IN AN ASSORTATIVELY MATING POPULATION
TLDR
This work analyzes a two‐locus two‐allele model, in which the primary locus has a major effect on a quantitative trait that is under a mixture of frequency‐independent stabilizing selection, density‐ dependent selection, and frequency‐dependent selection caused by intraspecific competition for a continuum of resources.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 96 REFERENCES
On the evolution of dominance, over-dominance and balanced polymorphism
  • P. O'donald
  • Biology
    Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences
  • 1967
TLDR
Recurrence relations are derived for the natural selection of a selective coefficient that is subject to additive genetic variations that will explain many polymorphisms, like the sickle cell trait in man, which have a highly deleterious homozygote.
The Evolution of Dominance in Certain Polymorphic Species
TLDR
It is tentatively suggested that, at least in the grouse locusts and the snails, the primary cause of the three peculiarities of polymorphism, close linkage and the universal recessive type of dominance is found in mollusks, arthropods and vertebrates.
Models of the evolution of dominance
  • P. O'donald
  • Biology
    Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences
  • 1968
TLDR
It follows from Clarke & S heppard’s discovery of certain rare mimics of Papilio dardanus that this is the greatest possible heterozygous advantage that can be acting on the modifiers.
Genetic Polymorphism in Heterogeneous Environments
TLDR
This last type of balancing selection is examined here in an effort to understand the importance of selection varying in time and/or space in maintaining genetic polymQrphisms.
FREQUENCY‐DEPENDENT SELECTION FOR THE DOMINANCE OF RARE POLYMORPHIC GENES
TLDR
A more general model is suggested, and the effects of frequency-dependent selection upon the dominance of polymorphic genes are considered, which deals with the situation (probably uncommon) in which the heterozygote is phenotypically distinct from both homozygotes, resembles neither of them, and tends towards an independent selective focus.
Genetic Equilibrium When More Than One Ecological Niche is Available
TLDR
The question arose of whether it was in fact possible to have equilibrium without the heterozygote being superior to both homozygotes in any single niche and it is shown below that under certain assumptions the answer is yes.
Natural selection for modifiers of heterozygote fitness.
  • W. Bodmer
  • Biology
    Journal of theoretical biology
  • 1963
Evolution of dominance
TLDR
Modifiers of dominance are of widespread occurrence and, in some cases at least, are responsible for the presence of dominance as observed in nature.
Evidence against Fisher's theory of dominance
TLDR
Recent experimental evidence on the heterozygous effects of mutations affecting viability in Drosophila that seems to be inconsistent with Fisher's theory of the evolution of dominance is pointed out, and two alternative theories proposed by Haldane are looked at.
The evolution of dominance under disruptive selection
TLDR
The most fully understood examples of disruptive selection (other than sex) are provided by instances of Batesian Mimicry, where there are a number of distinct warningly coloured species, acting as models, which are mimicked by the polymorphic forms of a single more edible species.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...