neutrality theory of evolution

views updated May 29 2018

neutrality theory of evolution(neutral mutation theory) A theory proposed in 1983 by the Japanese geneticist MotooKimura, which asserts that many genetic mutations are adaptively equivalent (effectively neutral), and do not affect significantly the fitness of the carrier. Thus they can become fixed in the genome at a random rate. Changes in their frequencies are more often the result of chance than of natural selection. The theory applies only to protein evolution and does not deny the role of natural selection in shaping morphological and behavioural attributes, but it is critical of the role of selection in maintaining polymorphism, which it regards as a transient phase of molecular evolution resulting from a balance between mutational input and random extinction by drift. Kimura has made important contributions to the understanding of evolutionary change by constructing mathematical models based on it.

neutrality theory of evolution

views updated Jun 08 2018

neutrality theory of evolution (neutral-mutation theory) A theory proposed by Motoo Kimura that many genetic mutations are adaptively equivalent (effectively neutral), and do not affect significantly the adaptive value of the carrier. Thus they can become fixed in the genome at a random rate. Changes in their frequencies are due more to chance than to natural selection. The theory has been formally applied only to protein evolution, although there is no reason why it should not also work for aspects of gross morphology, and does not deny the role of natural selection in addition. See also MOLECULAR EVOLUTION.

neutrality theory of evolution

views updated Jun 11 2018

neutrality theory of evolution (neutral mutation theory) A theory, proposed by the Japanese geneticist Motoo Kimura, which asserts that many genetic mutations are adaptively equivalent (effectively neutral), and do not affect significantly the fitness of the carrier. Thus they can become fixed in the genome at a random rate. Changes in their frequencies are due more to chance than to natural selection. The theory applies only to protein evolution and does not deny the role of natural selection in shaping morphological and behavioural attributes, but Kimura made important contributions to the understanding of evolutionary change by constructing mathematical models based on it. See also MOLECULAR EVOLUTION.

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