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Publication : An epistatic genetic basis for fluctuating asymmetry of mandible size in mice.

First Author  Leamy LJ Year  2002
Journal  Evolution Volume  56
Issue  3 Pages  642-53
PubMed ID  11989692 Mgi Jnum  J:95731
Mgi Id  MGI:3530492 Doi  10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01373.x
Citation  Leamy LJ, et al. (2002) An epistatic genetic basis for fluctuating asymmetry of mandible size in mice. Evolution Int J Org Evolution 56(3):642-53
abstractText  The genetic basis of fluctuating asymmetry (FA), or nondirectional variation in the subtle differences between left and right sides of bilateral characters, continues to be of considerable theoretical interest. FA generally has been thought to arise from random noise during development and therefore to have a largely or entirely environmental origin. Whereas additive genetic variation for FA generally has been small and often insignificant, a number of investigators have hypothesized that interactions between loci, or epistasis, significantly influence FA. We tested this hypothesis by conducting a whole-genome scan to detect any epistasis in FA of centroid size in the mandibles of more than 400 mice from an F2 intercross population formed from crossing the Large (LG/J) and Small (SM/J) inbred strains. Genotypic deviations were imputed at each site 2 cM apart on all 19 autosomes, and these and centroid size asymmetry values were used in canonical correlation analyses for each of the 171 possible pairs of 19 autosomes to identify the most probable sites for epistasis. Epistasis for centroid size asymmetry was abundant, occurring far more often than was expected by chance alone (there were 30 separate instances of epistasis at the 0.001 significance level, when only two were expected by chance alone). The contributions of epistasis from 30 pairwise combinations of loci tended to suppress the additive and dominance genetic variance, but greatly increased the epistatic genetic variance for FA in centroid size given the intermediate allele frequencies of an F2 intercross population.
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