Chapter Category: Gene Expression

From the book The Biology of Genetic Dominance

Dominance, Nonlinear Developmental Mapping and Developmental Stability

Christian Peter Klingenberg

Developmental stability is the ability of organisms to buffer against the random variation that arises spontaneously as a consequence of stochastic variation in the cellular processes that are involved in the development of morphological structures. Its converse, developmental instability, is the imprecision that leads to morphological variability even when genetic and environmental conditions are kept constant, and can be conveniently measured as the random left-right differences of bilaterally symmetric organisms. This chapter demonstrates that the genetic control of developmental stability is intimately connected with nonadditive genetic variation of the morphological traits of interest. Dominance and epistasis have also been shown by empirical studies to play an important role in the genetic architecture of developmental stability. A brief review of some mechanisms that generate stochastic variation in gene expression suggests that nonadditive genetic variation is also an important factor for the origin of developmental noise.

Taken from the book

The Biology of Genetic Dominance

Edited by: Christian Peter Klingenberg

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