An experimental test for genetic constraints in Drosophila melanogaster
Ian Dworkin, David Tack, Jarrod Hadfield

TL;DR
This study experimentally tests for genetic constraints in Drosophila melanogaster by examining the effects of a specific mutation on genetic variation and correlations, finding no evidence of constraints despite phenotypic changes.
Contribution
The paper introduces an experimental approach to test genetic constraints using targeted mutations and analyzes their impact on genetic variation and structure.
Findings
Ubx1 mutation causes homeotic transformations and affects allometry
No significant change in genetic correlation structure observed
Eigenvalue distribution of G remains unchanged with mutation
Abstract
In addition to natural selection, adaptive evolution requires genetic variation to proceed. Yet the G-matrix may have limited 'genetic degrees of freedom', with certain combinations of trait values unavailable to evolution. Such limitations are often referred to as genetic constraints. Unfortunately, clear predictions about when to expect constraints are rarely available. Therefore, we developed an experimental system that provides specific predictions regarding constraints. Such tests are important as disagreements persist regarding the evidence for genetic constraints, possibly due to differences in methodology, study system or both. Numerous measures of genetic constraints have been suggested, and generally focus on whether some axes of G have eigenvalues=~0, indicating a lack of genetic variance.The mutation Ultrabithorax1 causes a mild homeotic transformation of segmental identity.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Algorithms and Applications
