1,348,569 research outputs found
The genetic equidistance result of molecular evolution is independent of mutation rates
The well-established genetic equidistance result shows that sister species are approximately equidistant to a simpler outgroup as measured by DNA or protein dissimilarity. The equidistance result is the most direct evidence, and remains the only evidence, for the constant mutation rate interpretation of this result, known as the molecular clock. However, data independent of the equidistance result have steadily accumulated in recent years that often violate a constant mutation rate. Many have automatically inferred non-equidistance whenever a non-constant mutation rate was observed, based on the unproven assumption that the equidistance result is an outcome of constant mutation rate. Here it is shown that the equidistance result remains valid even when different species can be independently shown to have different mutation rates. A random sampling of 50 proteins shows that nearly all proteins display the equidistance result despite the fact that many proteins have non-constant mutation rates. Therefore, the genetic equidistance result does not necessarily mean a constant mutation rate. Observations of different mutation rates do not invalidate the genetic equidistance result. New ideas are needed to explain the genetic equidistance result that must grant different mutation rates to different species and must be independently testable
Nonlinear Dynamics of the Rock-Paper-Scissors Game with Mutations
We analyze the replicator-mutator equations for the Rock-Paper-Scissors game.
Various graph-theoretic patterns of mutation are considered, ranging from a
single unidirectional mutation pathway between two of the species, to global
bidirectional mutation among all the species. Our main result is that the
coexistence state, in which all three species exist in equilibrium, can be
destabilized by arbitrarily small mutation rates. After it loses stability, the
coexistence state gives birth to a stable limit cycle solution created in a
supercritical Hopf bifurcation. This attracting periodic solution exists for
all the mutation patterns considered, and persists arbitrarily close to the
limit of zero mutation rate and a zero-sum game.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Generalized Hybrid Evolutionary Algorithm Framework with a Mutation Operator Requiring no Adaptation
This paper presents a generalized hybrid evolutionary optimization structure that not only combines both nondeterministic and deterministic algorithms on their individual merits and distinct advantages, but also offers behaviors of the three originating classes of evolutionary algorithms (EAs). In addition, a robust mutation operator is developed in place of the necessity of mutation adaptation, based on the mutation properties of binary-coded individuals in a genetic algorithm. The behaviour of this mutation operator is examined in full and its performance is compared with adaptive mutations. The results show that the new mutation operator outperforms adaptive mutation operators while reducing complications of extra adaptive parameters in an EA representation
Silting mutation in triangulated categories
In representation theory of algebras the notion of `mutation' often plays
important roles, and two cases are well known, i.e. `cluster tilting mutation'
and `exceptional mutation'. In this paper we focus on `tilting mutation', which
has a disadvantage that it is often impossible, i.e. some of summands of a
tilting object can not be replaced to get a new tilting object. The aim of this
paper is to take away this disadvantage by introducing `silting mutation' for
silting objects as a generalization of `tilting mutation'. We shall develope a
basic theory of silting mutation. In particular, we introduce a partial order
on the set of silting objects and establish the relationship with `silting
mutation' by generalizing the theory of Riedtmann-Schofield and Happel-Unger.
We show that iterated silting mutation act transitively on the set of silting
objects for local, hereditary or canonical algebras. Finally we give a
bijection between silting subcategories and certain t-structures.Comment: 29 page
Fast Genetic Algorithms
For genetic algorithms using a bit-string representation of length~, the
general recommendation is to take as mutation rate. In this work, we
discuss whether this is really justified for multimodal functions. Taking jump
functions and the evolutionary algorithm as the simplest example, we
observe that larger mutation rates give significantly better runtimes. For the
\jump_{m,n} function, any mutation rate between and leads to a
speed-up at least exponential in compared to the standard choice.
The asymptotically best runtime, obtained from using the mutation rate
and leading to a speed-up super-exponential in , is very sensitive to small
changes of the mutation rate. Any deviation by a small (1 \pm \eps) factor
leads to a slow-down exponential in . Consequently, any fixed mutation rate
gives strongly sub-optimal results for most jump functions.
Building on this observation, we propose to use a random mutation rate
, where is chosen from a power-law distribution. We prove
that the EA with this heavy-tailed mutation rate optimizes any
\jump_{m,n} function in a time that is only a small polynomial (in~)
factor above the one stemming from the optimal rate for this .
Our heavy-tailed mutation operator yields similar speed-ups (over the best
known performance guarantees) for the vertex cover problem in bipartite graphs
and the matching problem in general graphs.
Following the example of fast simulated annealing, fast evolution strategies,
and fast evolutionary programming, we propose to call genetic algorithms using
a heavy-tailed mutation operator \emph{fast genetic algorithms}
An Evolutionary Reduction Principle for Mutation Rates at Multiple Loci
A model of mutation rate evolution for multiple loci under arbitrary
selection is analyzed. Results are obtained using techniques from Karlin (1982)
that overcome the weak selection constraints needed for tractability in prior
studies of multilocus event models. A multivariate form of the reduction
principle is found: reduction results at individual loci combine topologically
to produce a surface of mutation rate alterations that are neutral for a new
modifier allele. New mutation rates survive if and only if they fall below this
surface - a generalization of the hyperplane found by Zhivotovsky et al. (1994)
for a multilocus recombination modifier. Increases in mutation rates at some
loci may evolve if compensated for by decreases at other loci. The strength of
selection on the modifier scales in proportion to the number of germline cell
divisions, and increases with the number of loci affected. Loci that do not
make a difference to marginal fitnesses at equilibrium are not subject to the
reduction principle, and under fine tuning of mutation rates would be expected
to have higher mutation rates than loci in mutation-selection balance. Other
results include the nonexistence of 'viability analogous, Hardy-Weinberg'
modifier polymorphisms under multiplicative mutation, and the sufficiency of
average transmission rates to encapsulate the effect of modifier polymorphisms
on the transmission of loci under selection. A conjecture is offered regarding
situations, like recombination in the presence of mutation, that exhibit
departures from the reduction principle. Constraints for tractability are:
tight linkage of all loci, initial fixation at the modifier locus, and mutation
distributions comprising transition probabilities of reversible Markov chains.Comment: v3: Final corrections. v2: Revised title, reworked and expanded
introductory and discussion sections, added corollaries, new results on
modifier polymorphisms, minor corrections. 49 pages, 64 reference
Use of the q-Gaussian mutation in evolutionary algorithms
Copyright @ Springer-Verlag 2010.This paper proposes the use of the q-Gaussian mutation with self-adaptation of the shape of the mutation distribution in evolutionary algorithms. The shape of the q-Gaussian mutation distribution is controlled by a real parameter q. In the proposed method, the real parameter q of the q-Gaussian mutation is encoded in the chromosome of individuals and hence is allowed to evolve during the evolutionary process. In order to test the new mutation operator, evolution strategy and evolutionary programming algorithms with self-adapted q-Gaussian mutation generated from anisotropic and isotropic distributions are presented. The theoretical analysis of the q-Gaussian mutation is also provided. In the experimental study, the q-Gaussian mutation is compared to Gaussian and Cauchy mutations in the optimization of a set of test functions. Experimental results show the efficiency of the proposed method of self-adapting the mutation distribution in evolutionary algorithms.This work was supported in part by FAPESP and CNPq in Brazil and in part by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of the UK under Grant EP/E060722/1 and Grant EP/E060722/2
Clinical and molecular characterization of a cardiac ryanodine receptor founder mutation causing catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia
Background Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is a difficult-to-diagnose cause of sudden cardiac death (SCD). We identified a family of 1400 individuals with multiple cases of CPVT, including 36 SCDs during youth. Objectives We sought to identify the genetic cause of CPVT in this family, to preventively treat and clinically characterize the mutation-positive individuals, and to functionally characterize the pathogenic mechanisms of the mutation. Methods Genetic testing was performed for 1404 relatives. Mutation-positive individuals were preventively treated with β-blockers and clinically characterized with a serial exercise treadmill test (ETT) and Holter monitoring. In vitro functional studies included caffeine sensitivity and store overload–induced calcium release activity of the mutant channel in HEK293 cells. Results We identified the p.G357S_RyR2 mutation, in the cardiac ryanodine receptor, in 179 family members and in 6 SCD cases. No SCD was observed among treated mutation-positive individuals over a median follow-up of 37 months; however, 3 relatives who had refused genetic testing (confirmed mutation-positive individuals) experienced SCD. Holter monitoring did not provide relevant information for CPVT diagnosis. One single ETT was unable to detect complex cardiac arrhythmias in 72% of mutation-positive individuals, though the serial ETT improved the accuracy. Functional studies showed that the G357S mutation increased caffeine sensitivity and store overload–induced calcium release activity under conditions that mimic catecholaminergic stress. Conclusion Our study supports the use of genetic testing to identify individuals at risk of SCD to undertake prophylactic interventions. We also show that the pathogenic mechanisms of p.G357S_RyR2 appear to depend on β-adrenergic stimulation
The role of mutation rate variation and genetic diversity in the architecture of human disease
Background
We have investigated the role that the mutation rate and the structure of genetic variation at a locus play in determining whether a gene is involved in disease. We predict that the mutation rate and its genetic diversity should be higher in genes associated with disease, unless all genes that could cause disease have already been identified.
Results
Consistent with our predictions we find that genes associated with Mendelian and complex disease are substantially longer than non-disease genes. However, we find that both Mendelian and complex disease genes are found in regions of the genome with relatively low mutation rates, as inferred from intron divergence between humans and chimpanzees, and they are predicted to have similar rates of non-synonymous mutation as other genes. Finally, we find that disease genes are in regions of significantly elevated genetic diversity, even when variation in the rate of mutation is controlled for. The effect is small nevertheless.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that gene length contributes to whether a gene is associated with disease. However, the mutation rate and the genetic architecture of the locus appear to play only a minor role in determining whether a gene is associated with disease
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