Intrinsic noise and the design of the genetic machinery

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Abstract

Darwinian theory envisages 'selection pressure' as a stress imposed on the genotype by the environment. However, noise in the replicative and translational mechanisms in itself imposes a significant 'pressure' on the adaptive fitness of the organism. We propose that the biosphere has been shaped by both extrinsic (environmental) and intrinsic (noise-generated) factors. Because noise has been a remorseless and ever-present background to the evolutionary process, adaptations to this intrinsic pressure include not only a variety of familiar genetic mechanisms but also many anatomical and life-style characteristics that focus on the transmission of information between generations. © 1983 ASEG.

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APA

Reanney, D. C., Macphee, D. G., & Pressing, J. (1983). Intrinsic noise and the design of the genetic machinery. Australian Journal of Biological Sciences, 36(1), 77–90. https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9830077

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