The mutant allele frequencies in oncogenes peak around .40 and rapidly decrease. In this article, we explain why this is the case. Invoking a key result from mathematical analysis in our model, namely, the inverse function theorem, we estimate the selection coefficients of the mutant alleles as a function of germline allele frequencies. Under complete dominance of oncogenic mutations, this selection function is expected to be linearly correlated with the distribution of the mutant alleles. We demonstrate that this is the case by investigating the allele frequencies of mutations in oncogenes across various cancer types, validating our model for mean effective selection. Consistent with the population genetics model of fitness, the selection ...
When selection is acting on a large genetically diverse population, beneficial alleles increase in f...
International audienceAn intriguing fact long defying explanation is the observation of a universal ...
The evolution of quantitative characters depends on the frequencies of the alleles involved, yet the...
<p>The mutant allele frequencies in oncogenes peak around .40 and rapidly decrease. In this article,...
We consider disease-causing mutations that are lethal when homozygous. Lethality involves the very s...
In evolutionary theory, a key issue in selection theory is the expected time for a given amount of a...
International audienceIn classical population genetics, mutation-selection balance refers to the equ...
Recently available cancer sequencing data have revealed a complex view of the cancer genome containi...
Longitudinal allele frequency data are becoming increasingly prevalent. Such samples permit statisti...
We contrast the expected allele frequency ratios of the first minor locus (with the second highest f...
Do the frequencies of disease mutations in human populations reflect a simple balance between mutati...
<div><p>Population bottlenecks followed by re-expansions have been common throughout history of many...
Evolutionary dynamics driven out of equilibrium by growth, expansion, or adaptation often generate a...
When selection is acting on a large genetically diverse population, beneficial alleles increase in f...
The distribution of fitness effects (DFE) of new mutations plays a fundamental role in evolutionary ...
When selection is acting on a large genetically diverse population, beneficial alleles increase in f...
International audienceAn intriguing fact long defying explanation is the observation of a universal ...
The evolution of quantitative characters depends on the frequencies of the alleles involved, yet the...
<p>The mutant allele frequencies in oncogenes peak around .40 and rapidly decrease. In this article,...
We consider disease-causing mutations that are lethal when homozygous. Lethality involves the very s...
In evolutionary theory, a key issue in selection theory is the expected time for a given amount of a...
International audienceIn classical population genetics, mutation-selection balance refers to the equ...
Recently available cancer sequencing data have revealed a complex view of the cancer genome containi...
Longitudinal allele frequency data are becoming increasingly prevalent. Such samples permit statisti...
We contrast the expected allele frequency ratios of the first minor locus (with the second highest f...
Do the frequencies of disease mutations in human populations reflect a simple balance between mutati...
<div><p>Population bottlenecks followed by re-expansions have been common throughout history of many...
Evolutionary dynamics driven out of equilibrium by growth, expansion, or adaptation often generate a...
When selection is acting on a large genetically diverse population, beneficial alleles increase in f...
The distribution of fitness effects (DFE) of new mutations plays a fundamental role in evolutionary ...
When selection is acting on a large genetically diverse population, beneficial alleles increase in f...
International audienceAn intriguing fact long defying explanation is the observation of a universal ...
The evolution of quantitative characters depends on the frequencies of the alleles involved, yet the...