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Scientific
Publications - Work Done by Microbiology Reader Piotr Sliwa, Joanna Kluz, Ryszard Korona,
ABSTRACT
Mutations were accumulated over hundreds of generations in a mutator strain of
yeast in a constant laboratory environment. This ensured that mutations were
frequent and that the quality of environment remained unchanged. Mutations
were accumulated in asexual populations of diploids but their impact on
fitness was tested both for the diploid clones and for haploid clones derived
from them. Dozens of harmful and lethal mutations accumulated in diploids, but
important phenotypic traits, such as maximum growth rate, did not deteriorate
by more than 10%. There were no signs of decline in population size. In strong
contrast, the populations of haploids derived from the diploids suffered from
high mortality; their density was reduced by more than three orders of
magnitude. These findings indicate how ineffective natural selection can be in
removing deleterious mutations from populations of clonally reproducing
diploids. They also suggest that phenotypic assays of heterozygous diploids
may be of little value as indicators of increasing genetic degeneration.
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