Some evolutionary consequences of deleterious mutations Brian CharlesworthDeborah Charlesworth OriginalPaper Pages: 3 - 19
Risk of population extinction from fixation of deleterious and reverse mutations Russell Lande OriginalPaper Pages: 21 - 27
Deleterious mutation accumulation in organelle genomes Michael LynchJeffrey L. Blanchard OriginalPaper Pages: 29 - 39
Mutation pressure, natural selection, and the evolution of base composition in Drosophila Hiroshi AkashiRichard M. KlimanAdam Eyre-Walker OriginalPaper Pages: 49 - 60
Requisite mutational load, pathway epistasis, and deterministic mutation accumulation in sexual versus asexual populations William R. Rice OriginalPaper Pages: 71 - 81
The amount and pattern of DNA polymorphism under the neutral mutation hypothesis Fumio TajimaKazuharu MisawaHideki Innan OriginalPaper Pages: 103 - 107
Adaptive mutagenesis: a process that generates almost exclusively beneficial mutations Barry G. Hall OriginalPaper Pages: 109 - 125
The fate of competing beneficial mutations in an asexual population Philip J. GerrishRichard E. Lenski OriginalPaper Pages: 127 - 144
An embarrassment of riches: the stochastic generation of beneficial mutations Damian D. G. GesslerShizhong Xu OriginalPaper Pages: 145 - 155
Selection, convergence, and intragenic recombination in HLA diversity Naoyuki TakahataYoko Satta OriginalPaper Pages: 157 - 169
Mutation and conflicts between artificial and natural selection for quantitative traits William G. HillSaid H. Mbaga OriginalPaper Pages: 171 - 181
Measuring spontaneous deleterious mutation process Alexey S. Kondrashov OriginalPaper Pages: 183 - 197
Polygenic mutation in Drosophila melanogaster: genotype × environment interaction for spontaneous mutations affecting bristle number Trudy F.C. MackayRichard F. Lyman OriginalPaper Pages: 199 - 215
Environment-influenced expression of polygene mutations isolated from a natural population of Drosophila melanogaster James N. Thompson Jr.Mingull JeungJ.M. Thoday OriginalPaper Pages: 217 - 228
Inferences on genome-wide deleterious mutation rates in inbred populations of Drosophila and mice Armando CaballeroPeter D. Keightley OriginalPaper Pages: 229 - 239
How should we explain variation in the genetic variance of traits? David Houle OriginalPaper Pages: 241 - 253
The mutation rate and the distribution of mutational effects of viability and fitness in Drosophila melanogaster Aurora García-DoradoJuan L. MonederoCarlos López-Fanjul OriginalPaper Pages: 255 - 265
Evolution of intermediate selfing rates in plants: pollination ecology versus deleterious mutations Mark O. Johnston OriginalPaper Pages: 267 - 278
Mutation and senescence: where genetics and demography meet Daniel E.L. PromislowMarc Tatar OriginalPaper Pages: 299 - 314
Spontaneous mutation for life-history traits in Drosophila melanogaster C. MartorellM.A. ToroC. Gallego OriginalPaper Pages: 315 - 324
Asymmetrical DNA replication promotes evolution: disparity theory of evolution Mitsuru FurusawaHirofumi Doi OriginalPaper Pages: 333 - 347
Distribution of fitness effects caused by random insertion mutations in Escherichia coli Santiago F. ElenaLynette EkunweRichard E. Lenski OriginalPaper Pages: 349 - 358
Mutation and evolution of microsatellites in Drosophila melanogaster Malcolm D. SchugCarolyn M. HutterCharles F. Aquadro OriginalPaper Pages: 359 - 367
The molecular clock revisited: the rate of synonymous vs. replacement change in Drosophila Ling-Wen ZengJosep M. ComeronMartin Kreitman OriginalPaper Pages: 369 - 382
Directional mutational pressure affects the amino acid composition and hydrophobicity of proteins in bacteria Xun GuDavid Hewett-EmmettWen-Hsiung Li OriginalPaper Pages: 383 - 391
Mutation and selection at silent and replacement sites in the evolution of animal mitochondrial DNA David M. RandLisa M. Kann OriginalPaper Pages: 393 - 407
Enigma of Y chromosome degeneration: Neo-Y and Neo-X chromosomes of Drosophila miranda a model for sex chromosome evolution Manfred SteinemannSigrid Steinemann OriginalPaper Pages: 409 - 420
The developmental basis for germline mosaicism in mouse and Drosophila melanogaster Joni B. DrostWilliam R. Lee OriginalPaper Pages: 421 - 443
Major impacts of gonadal mosaicism on hereditary risk estimation, origin of hereditary diseases, and evolution P.B. Selby OriginalPaper Pages: 445 - 462
Discovery of numerous clusters of spontaneous mutations in the specific-locus test in mice necessitates major increases in estimates of doubling doses P.B. Selby OriginalPaper Pages: 463 - 487
Clusters of new identical mutants and the fate of underdominant mutations Haiying HuaiR.C. Woodruff OriginalPaper Pages: 489 - 505
Mutation and selection within the individual Sarah P. OttoIan M. Hastings OriginalPaper Pages: 507 - 524
Towards a theory of evolutionary adaptation Daniel L. HartlClifford H. Taubes OriginalPaper Pages: 525 - 533
Population differentiation through mutation and drift – a comparison of genetic identity measures Jürgen TomiukBernt GuldbrandtsenVolker Loeschcke OriginalPaper Pages: 545 - 558
Inferring the major genomic mode of dominance and overdominance Hong-Wen DengYun-Xin FuMichael Lynch OriginalPaper Pages: 559 - 567
Genetic measurement theory of epistatic effects Günter P. WagnerManfred D. LaubichlerHomayoun Bagheri-Chaichian OriginalPaper Pages: 569 - 580