Directional selection can drive the evolution of modularity in complex traits
Authored by Diogo Melo, Gabriel Marroig
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1322632112
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C
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Abstract
Modularity is a central concept in modern biology, providing a powerful
framework for the study of living organisms on many organizational
levels. Two central and related questions can be posed in regard to
modularity: How does modularity appear in the first place, and what
forces are responsible for keeping and/or changing modular patterns? We
approached these questions using a quantitative genetics simulation
framework, building on previous results obtained with bivariate systems
and extending them to multivariate systems. We developed an
individual-based model capable of simulating many traits controlled by
many loci with variable pleiotropic relations between them, expressed in
populations subject to mutation, recombination, drift, and selection. We
used this model to study the problem of the emergence of modularity, and
hereby show that drift and stabilizing selection are inefficient at
creating modular variational structures. We also demonstrate that
directional selection can have marked effects on the modular structure
between traits, actively promoting a restructuring of genetic variation
in the selected population and potentially facilitating the response to
selection. Furthermore, we give examples of complex covariation created
by simple regimes of combined directional and stabilizing selection and
show that stabilizing selection is important in the maintenance of
established covariation patterns. Our results are in full agreement with
previous results for two-trait systems and further extend them to
include scenarios of greater complexity. Finally, we discuss the
evolutionary consequences of modular patterns being molded by
directional selection.
Tags
population
patterns
Mutation
stability
Natural-selection
Constraints
G-matrix
Morphological integration
Evolvability
Characters