The infinitesimal model with dominance
N.H. Barton, A.M. Etheridge, A. V\'eber

TL;DR
This paper extends the classical infinitesimal model to include dominance effects, demonstrating that trait distributions remain approximately normal as the number of loci increases, with implications for quantitative genetics modeling.
Contribution
The paper generalizes the infinitesimal model to incorporate dominance, providing a theoretical justification as a limit of Mendelian inheritance with many loci.
Findings
Trait values are asymptotically normal with many loci.
Shared and residual components of traits are normally distributed.
Error decreases as 1/√M with increasing loci.
Abstract
The classical infinitesimal model is a simple and robust model for the inheritance of quantitative traits. In this model, a quantitative trait is expressed as the sum of a genetic and a non-genetic (environmental) component and the genetic component of offspring traits within a family follows a normal distribution around the average of the parents' trait values, and has a variance that is independent of the trait values of the parents. In previous work, Barton et al.(2017), we showed that when trait values are determined by the sum of a large number of Mendelian factors, each of small effect, one can justify the infinitesimal model as limit of Mendelian inheritance. In this paper, we show that the robustness of the infinitesimal model extends to include dominance. We define the model in terms of classical quantities of quantitative genetics, before justifying it as a limit of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and Animals · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Genetics and Plant Breeding
