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Assortative mating has been suggested to result in an increase in heritability and additive genetic variance through an increase in linkage disequilibrium. The impact of assortative mating on linkage disequilibrium was explicitly examined for the two-locus model of Wright (1921) and two selective assortative mating models. For the Wright (1921) model, when the proportion of assortative mating was high, positive linkage disequilibrium was generated. However, when the proportion of assortative mating was similar to that found in some studies, the amount of linkage disequilibrium was quite low. In addition, the amount of linkage disequilibrium was independent of the level of recombination. For two selective assortative models, the amount of linkage disequilibrium was a function of the amount of recombination. For these models, the linkage disequilibrium generated was negative mainly because repulsion heterozygotes were favored over coupling heterozygotes. From these findings, the impact of assortative mating on linkage disequilibrium, and consequently heritability and additive genetic variance, appears to be small and model-specific.
- Hedrick, Philip (Author)
- College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
Hedrick, P. W. (2016). Assortative Mating and Linkage Disequilibrium. G3 Genes|Genomes|Genetics, 7(1), 55-62. doi:10.1534/g3.116.034967
- 2017-06-19 05:27:18
- 2021-10-25 05:08:58
- 3 years ago