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. 1973 Jun;74(2):371–380. doi: 10.1093/genetics/74.2.371

Probability of Fixation and Mean Fixation Time of an Overdominant Mutation

Masatoshi Nei 1, A K Roychoudhury 1
PMCID: PMC1212952  PMID: 4721737

Abstract

The probability of fixation of an overdominant mutation in a finite population depends on the equilibrium gene frequency in an infinite population (m) and the product (A) of population size and selection intensity. If m < 0.5 (disadvantageous overdominant genes), the probability is generally much lower than that of neutral genes; but if m is close to 0.5 and A is relatively small, it becomes higher. If m > 0.5 (advantageous overdominant genes), the probability is largely determined by the fitness of heterozygotes rather than that of mutant homozygotes. Thus, overdominance enhances the probability of fixation of advantageous mutations. The average number of generations until fixation of an overdominant mutation also depends on m and A. This average time is long when m is close to 0.5 but short when m is close to 0 or 1. This dependence on m and A is similar to that of Robertson's retardation factor.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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