Show simple item record

Authordc.contributor.authorValenzuela, Carlos Y. 
Admission datedc.date.accessioned2014-01-24T18:31:46Z
Available datedc.date.available2014-01-24T18:31:46Z
Publication datedc.date.issued2013-03-11
Cita de ítemdc.identifier.citationBiol Res 46: 101-119, 2013en_US
Identifierdc.identifier.issn0716-9760
Identifierdc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129167
General notedc.descriptionArtículo de publicación ISI.en_US
Abstractdc.description.abstractThe Neutral Theory of Evolution (NTE) proposes mutation and random genetic drift as the most important evolutionary factors. The most conspicuous feature of evolution is the genomic stability during paleontological eras and lack of variation among taxa; 98% or more of nucleotide sites are monomorphic within a species. NTE explains this homology by random fi xation of neutral bases and negative selection (purifying selection) that does not contribute either to evolution or polymorphisms. Purifying selection is insuffi cient to account for this evolutionary feature and the Nearly-Neutral Theory of Evolution (N-NTE) included negative selection with coeffi cients as low as mutation rate. These NTE and N-NTE propositions are thermodynamically (tendency to random distributions, second law), biotically (recurrent mutation), logically and mathematically (resilient equilibria instead of fi xation by drift) untenable. Recurrent forward and backward mutation and random fl uctuations of base frequencies alone in a site make life organization and fi xations impossible. Drift is not a directional evolutionary factor, but a directional tendency of matter-energy processes (second law) which threatens the biotic organization. Drift cannot drive evolution. In a site, the mutation rates among bases and selection coeffi cients determine the resilient equilibrium frequency of bases that genetic drift cannot change. The expected neutral random interaction among nucleotides is zero; however, huge interactions and periodicities were found between bases of dinucleotides separated by 1, 2… and more than 1,000 sites. Every base is coadapted with the whole genome. Neutralists found that neutral evolution is independent of population size (N); thus neutral evolution should be independent of drift, because drift eff ect is dependent upon N. Also, chromosome size and shape as well as protein size are far from random.en_US
Lenguagedc.language.isoenen_US
Publisherdc.publisherSOC BIOLGIA CHILEen_US
Type of licensedc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile*
Link to Licensedc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/*
Keywordsdc.subjectFixationen_US
Títulodc.titleFoundational errors in the Neutral and Nearly-Neutral theories of evolution in relation to the Synthetic Theory. Is a new evolutionary paradigm necessary?en_US
Document typedc.typeArtículo de revista


Files in this item

Icon

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile