sfs
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Yes, that's the calculation that assumes that all selection is hard. All selection is not hard. So the conclusion does not follow -- which is why the authors go on to mention the possibility of soft selection two sentences later, a fact you somehow failed to mention. They also mention a couple of other effects that would mitigate the genetic load, one of which certainly occurs.About the paradox?
“What proportion of nonsynonymous changes are neutral and what proportion are deleterious? The fraction that are neutral, fo, can be calculated by comparing the total mutation rate, µt, with the substitution rate, νo = foµt (KIMURA 1983A, KIMURA 1983B). The proportion that are deleterious is 1 - fo. Using this approach, KIMURA 1983Bestimated that 86% of nonsynonymous substitutions are deleterious. A more conservative estimate is obtained by assuming that silent substitutions are entirely neutral and thus reflect the total mutation rate. Then the ratio of nonsynonymous to silent substitutions (Ka/Ks) estimates fo. This will be an underestimate to the extent that silent mutations are deleterious. Data from Ohta indicate that the average = 0.27 among 49 genes in primates (OHTA 1995 ). This suggests that 1.7% of the genome is subject to constraint [= 0.017]. The estimated genomic deleterious mutation rate, U, is thus ∼3 (U = 175 x 0.017), with a minimum value of 1.5 (U = 91 x 0.017) and a maximum value of 4 (U = 238 x 0.017), based on differences in divergence time,”
“The high deleterious mutation rate in humans presents a paradox. If mutations interact multiplicatively, the genetic load associated with such a high U would be intolerable in species with a low rate of reproduction (MULLER 1950 ; WALLACE 1981 ; CROW 1993 ; KONDRASHOV 1995 ; EYRE-WALKER and KEIGHTLEY 1999 ). The reduction in fitness (i.e., the genetic load) due to deleterious mutations with multiplicative effects is given by 1 - e-U (KIMURA and MORUYAMA 1966 ). For U = 3, the average fitness is reduced to 0.05, or put differently, each female would need to produce 40 offspring for 2 to survive and maintain the population at constant size.”
http://www.genetics.org/content/156/1/297.full
Greater problems are most likely to come to light in higher genome differences between chimps and humans.
This is not what one could term a fact-based statement.
An incompatibility that has escaped the attention of scientists. (Which reminds me: weren't you going to explain why Haldane's Dilemma applied to neutral mutations? What happened to that explanation?)Evolution is only becoming more problematic, I refer to the irreconcilable observed mutation rates against the needed mutation rates that make a monkey into a man.
What if it isn't?What if “U” is even higher?
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