Naturally Occurring Variation in Bristle Number and DNA Polymorphisms at the scabrous Locus of Drosophila melanogaster

Male 0301 basic medicine Insecta Arthropoda Molecular Sequence Data Restriction Mapping Genes, Insect Linkage Disequilibrium 03 medical and health sciences flies Animalia Animals Drosophila Proteins Alleles Taxonomy Glycoproteins Polymorphism, Genetic Base Sequence Diptera Genetic Variation Proteins Sense Organs Biodiversity DNA Drosophila melanogaster Phenotype Haplotypes fruit flies Female
DOI: 10.1126/science.7992053 Publication Date: 2006-10-06T00:01:25Z
ABSTRACT
The association between quantitative genetic variation in bristle number and molecular variation at a candidate neurogenic locus, scabrous , was examined in Drosophila melanogaster . Approximately 32 percent of the genetic variation in abdominal bristle number (21 percent for sternopleural bristle number) among 47 second chromosomes from a natural population was correlated with DNA sequence polymorphisms at this locus. Several polymorphic sites associated with large phenotypic effects occurred at intermediate frequency. Quantitative genetic variation in natural populations caused by alleles that have large effects at a few loci and that segregate at intermediate frequencies conflicts with the classical infinitesimal model of the genetic basis of quantitative variation.
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