Unpredictable fitness transitions between haploid and diploid strains of the genetically loaded yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Abstract

Mutator strains of yeast were used to accumulate random point mutations. Most of the observed changes in fitness were negative and relatively small, although major decreases and increases were also present. The average fitness of haploid strains was lowered by ~25% due to the accumulated genetic load. The impact of the load remained basically unchanged when a homozygous diploid was compared with the haploid from which it was derived. In other experiments a heterozygous diploid was compared with the two different loaded haploids from which it was obtained. The fitness of such a loaded diploid was much less reduced and did not correlate with the average fitness of the two haploids. There was a fitness correlation, however, when genetically related heterozygous diploids were compared, indicating that the fitness effects of the new alleles were not entirely lost in the heterozygotes. It is argued here that to explain the observed pattern of fitness transitions it is necessary to invoke nonadditive genetic interactions that go beyond the uniform masking effect of wild-type alleles. Thus, the results gathered with haploids and homozygotes should be extrapolated to heterozygotes with caution when multiple loci contribute to the genetic load.

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APA

Korona, R. (1999). Unpredictable fitness transitions between haploid and diploid strains of the genetically loaded yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics, 151(1), 77–85. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/151.1.77

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