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E-raamat: Crumbling Genome: The Impact of Deleterious Mutations on Humans

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-May-2017
  • Kirjastus: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781118952122
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-May-2017
  • Kirjastus: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781118952122
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Crumbling Genome: The Impact of Deleterious Mutations on Humans

A thought-provoking exploration of deleterious mutations in the human genome and their effects on human health and wellbeing

Despite all of the elaborate mechanisms that a cell employs to handle its DNA with the utmost care, a newborn human carries about 100 new mutations, originated in their parents, about 10 of which are deleterious. A mutation replacing just one of the more than three billion nucleotides in the human genome may lead to synthesis of a dysfunctional protein, and this can be inconsistent with life or cause a tragic disease. Several percent of even young people suffer from diseases that are caused, exclusively or primarily, by pre‐existing and new mutations in their genomes, including both a wide variety of genetically simple Mendelian diseases and diverse complex diseases such as birth anomalies, diabetes, and schizophrenia. Milder, but still substantial, negative effects of mutations are even more pervasive. As of now, we possess no means of reducing the rate at which mutations appear spontaneously. However, the recent flood of genomic data made possible by next-generation methods of DNA sequencing, enabled scientists to explore the impacts of deleterious mutations on humans with previously unattainable precision and begin to develop approaches to managing them.

Written by a leading researcher in the field of evolutionary genetics, Crumbling Genome reviews the current state of knowledge about deleterious mutations and their effects on humans for those in the biological sciences and medicine, as well as for readers with only a general scientific literacy and an interest in human genetics.

  • Provides an extensive introduction to the fundamentals of evolutionary genetics with an emphasis on mutation and selection
  • Discusses the effects of pre-existing and new mutations on human genotypes and phenotypes
  • Provides a comprehensive review of the current state of knowledge in the field and considers crucial unsolved problems
  • Explores key ethical, scientific, and social issues likely to become relevant in the near future as the modification of human germline genotypes becomes technically feasible

Crumbling Genome is must-reading for students and professionals in human genetics, genomics, bioinformatics, evolutionary biology, and biological anthropology. It is certain to have great appeal among all those with an interest in the links between genetics and evolution and how they are likely to influence the future of human health, medicine, and society.

Preface ix
1 Genotypes and Phenotypes 1(22)
1.1 DNA is a Text
1(5)
1.2 Genomes Small and Large
6(1)
1.3 Genes and Intergenic Regions
7(7)
1.4 Cells, Mitosis, and Meiosis
14(3)
1.5 From Genotype to Phenotype
17(4)
Further Reading
21(2)
2 Mendelian Inheritance and Population Genetics 23(26)
2.1 Inheritance is Discrete
23(4)
2.2 Populations are Genetically Variable
27(6)
2.3 Loci and Genes
33(4)
2.4 Effects of Alleles on Phenotypes
37(6)
2.5 Mendelian Traits and Diseases
43(3)
Further Reading
46(3)
3 Complex Traits and Their Inheritance 49(22)
3.1 Complex Inheritance of Phenotypes
49(3)
3.2 Properties of a Complex Trait
52(3)
3.3 Complex Traits in Populations
55(5)
3.4 Effects of Heredity and Environment on Complex Traits
60(4)
3.5 Polymorphic Loci Behind Complex Variation
64(4)
Further Reading
68(3)
4 Unavoidable Mutation 71(12)
4.1 Phenomenon of Mutation
71(2)
4.2 Kinds of Mutations
73(2)
4.3 Spontaneous Mutation
75(2)
4.4 Evolution of Mutation Rates
77(2)
4.5 Artificial Mutagenesis and Antimutagenesis
79(2)
Further Reading
81(2)
5 Struggle for Fidelity 83(24)
5.1 Fidelity of DNA Replication
83(5)
5.2 Cleaning Up After the Replisome
88(3)
5.3 Dealing with DNA Damages
91(5)
5.4 Harms of Broken Maintenance
96(4)
5.5 Mechanisms of Mutation
100(4)
Further Reading
104(3)
6 Mutation Rates 107(16)
6.1 Measuring Mutation Rates
107(2)
6.2 Data on Mutation Rates
109(3)
6.3 Guilty Older Men
112(2)
6.4 Rates of Phenotypically Drastic Mutations
114(4)
6.5 Mild Mutations and Mutational Pressures
118(3)
Further Reading
121(2)
7 Natural Selection 123(18)
7.1 Vulnerable Adaptations and Their Evolutionary Origin
123(4)
7.2 Two Basic Characteristics of Selection
127(2)
7.3 Measuring Natural Selection
129(3)
7.4 Selection at a Polymorphic Locus
132(3)
7.5 Selection on a Quantitative Trait
135(3)
Further Reading
138(3)
8 Functioning DNA and Junk DNA 141(8)
8.1 Selective Neutrality and Random Drift
141(3)
8.2 Effective Population Size
144(1)
8.3 Junk DNA Provides the Simplest Evidence for Evolution
144(1)
8.4 Finding Functioning Genome Segments
145(2)
8.5 The Genomic Rate of Deleterious Mutations
147(1)
Further Reading
148(1)
9 It Takes All the Running You Can Do 149(16)
9.1 Middle Class Neighborhood for Drosophila
149(4)
9.2 Selection Against Deleterious Alleles
153(2)
9.3 Mutation-Selection Equilibrium
155(3)
9.4 Inbreeding Depression
158(2)
9.5 Dangerous Slightly Deleterious Alleles
160(2)
Further Reading
162(3)
10 Phenomenon of Imperfection 165(12)
10.1 Phenotypic and Genotypic Imperfection
165(3)
10.2 Five Evolutionary Causes of Imperfection
168(3)
10.3 Weakly Perfect Human Genotypes and Phenotypes
171(2)
10.4 Native, Novel, and Optimal Environments
173(2)
10.5 Factors, Exacerbating Mutation Imperfection
175(1)
Further Reading
176(1)
11 Our Imperfect Fitness 177(22)
11.1 Properties of an Allele
177(3)
11.2 Human Derived Alleles
180(6)
11.3 Average Imperfection of a Genotype
186(4)
11.4 Variation Among Genotypes
190(2)
11.5 Selection in Modern Human Populations
192(5)
Further Reading
197(2)
12 Our Imperfect Wellness 199(20)
12.1 Qualitative Characteristics of Wellness
199(7)
12.2 Quantitative Traits
206(2)
12.3 Contributions of Heredity and Environment
208(3)
12.4 Wellness-impairing Alleles
211(4)
12.5 Genetic Architecture of Wellness
215(2)
Further Reading
217(2)
13 Mutational Pressure on Our Species 219(14)
13.1 Mutational Pressure on Diseases
219(6)
13.2 Mutational Pressure on Quantitative Traits
225(1)
13.3 Possible Increase of the Mutational Pressure
226(2)
13.4 De Novo Mutations and Human Wellness
228(2)
13.5 Optimistic and Pessimistic Scenarios
230(1)
Further Reading
231(2)
14 Ethical Issues 233(20)
14.1 Lessons from History
233(4)
14.2 Modern Practices
237(4)
14.3 Humanist Ethics and the Main Concern
241(3)
14.4 The Main Concern and Ethical Dilemmas
244(3)
14.5 Role of Scientists
247(3)
Further Reading
250(3)
15 What to Do? 253(18)
15.1 Conditionally Beneficial or Unconditionally Deleterious?
253(4)
15.2 Mutationless Utopia: What Could It Be?
257(4)
15.3 Mutationless Utopia: Is It Ever Going to Happen?
261(4)
15.4 What Can I Do Without Germline Genotype Modification?
265(3)
15.5 Prognosis
268(1)
Further Reading
269(2)
Index 271
Alexey S. Kondrashov, PhD is Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His research interests include evolution of sex and genetic recombination, properties of spontaneous deleterious mutations and of selection against them, and dynamics of genetic variation in natural and artificial populations.