Skip to main content
. 2016 May 9;203(3):1369–1380. doi: 10.1534/genetics.115.185355

Figure 2.

Figure 2

A simple model of the accumulation of mutants in an asexual population. Here we consider a mutant subpopulation emerging within a much larger wild-type population (not shown). For simplicity, mutation and growth are treated deterministically: each generation the wild-type population doubles its size and produces twice as many new mutants, whereas preexistent mutants produce exactly r offspring (indicated with an arrow in the diagram). These assumptions will be relaxed later in the computer simulation models. Generation count starts at 0, when the wild-type population reaches a size of N0 = 1/μ individuals, where μ is the per-generation mutation rate. This period is referred to in the literature as the Luria–Delbrück period. General formulas for the size of clones from generation t’ at time t (st(t’)), number of mutants (mt), and number of clones (ct) are shown. Note how the clonal distribution becomes increasingly uneven provided that clones undergo some growth (r > 1).