Quantitative genetics
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceQuantitative genetics is the study of continuous traits (such as height or weight) and its underlying mechanisms. It is effectively an extension of simple Mendelian inheritance in that the combined effect of the many underlying genes results in a continuous distribution of phenotypic values.
History
The field was founded, in evolutionary terms, by the originators of the modern synthesis, R.A. Fisher, Sewall Wright and J. B. S. Haldane, and aimed to predict the response to selection given data on the phenotype and relationships of individuals.Analysis of Quantitative trait loci, or QTL, is a more recent addition to the study of quantitative genetics. A QTL is a region in the genome that affects the trait or traits of interest. Quantitative trait loci approaches require accurate phenotypic, pedigree and genotypic data from a large number of individuals.
Traits
Quantitative genetics is not limited to continuous traits, but to all traits that are determined by many genes. This includes:- Continuous traits are quantitative traits with a continuous phenotypic range. They are often polygenic, and may also be influenced significantly by environmental effects.
- Meristic traits or other ordinal numbers are expressed in whole numbers, such as number of offspring, or number of bristles on a fruit fly. These traits can be either treated as approximately continuous traits or as threshold traits.
- Some qualitative traits can be treated as if they have an underlying quantitative basis, expressed as a threshold trait (or multiple thresholds). Some human diseases (such as, schizophrenia) have been studied in this manner.
Basic principles
The phenotypic value (P) of an individual is the combined effect of the genotypic value (G) and the environmental deviation (E):
- P = G + E
- P = A + D + E + I
- VP = VA + VD + VE + VI
Resemblance between relatives
Central in estimating the variances for the various components is the principle of relatedness. A child has a father and a mother. Consequently, the child and father share 50% of their alleles, as do the child and the mother. However, the mother and father normally do not share genes as a result of shared ancestors. Similarly, two full siblings share also on average 50% of the alleles with each other, while half sibs share only 25% of their alleles. This variation in relatedness can be used to estimate which proportion of the total phenotypic variance (VP) is explained by the above-mentioned components.Correlated traits
Although some genes have only an effect on a single trait, many genes have an effect on various traits. Because of this, a change in a single gene will have an effect on all those traits. This is calculated using covariances, and the phenotypic covariance (CovP) between two traits can be partitioned in the same way as the variances described above. The genetic correlation is calculated by dividing the covariance between the additive genetic effects of two traits by the square root of the product of the variances for the additive genetic effects of the two traits:
References
- Falconer, D. S. & Mackay TFC (1996). Introduction to Quantitative Genetics. Fourth edition. Addison Wesley Longman, Harlow, Essex, UK.
- Roff DA (1997). Evolutionary Quantitative Genetics. Chapman & Hall, New York.
- Lynch M & Walsh B (1998). Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits. Sinauer, Sunderland, MA.
See also
- Ewens's sampling formula
- Heritability
- Artificial selection
- Selective breeding
- Population genetics, built on some of the same principles as quantitative genetics
- Genetic distance
External links
- Quantitative Genetics Resources by Michael Lynch and Bruce Walsh, including the two volumes of their textbook, Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits and Evolution and Selection of Quantitative Traits.
- Resources by Nick Barton et al. from the textbook, Evolution
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia © 2001-2006 Wikipedia contributors (Disclaimer)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Thursday March 13, 2008 at 09:00:14 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation