Author:
GAERTNER BRYN E.,PHILLIPS PATRICK C.
Abstract
SummaryOver the past 30 years, the characteristics that have made the nematodeCaenorhabditis elegansone of the premier animal model systems have also allowed it to emerge as a powerful model system for determining the genetic basis of quantitative traits, particularly for the identification of naturally segregating and/or lab-adapted alleles with large phenotypic effects. To better understand the genetic underpinnings of natural variation in other complex phenotypes,C. elegansis uniquely poised in the emerging field of quantitative systems biology because of the extensive knowledge of cellular and neural bases to such traits. However, perturbations in standing genetic variation and patterns of linkage disequilibrium among loci are likely to limit our ability to tie understanding of molecular function to a broader evolutionary context. Coupling the experimental strengths of theC. eleganssystem with the ecological advantages of closely related nematodes should provide a powerful means of understanding both the molecular and evolutionary genetics of quantitative traits.
Subject
Genetics,General Medicine
Cited by
52 articles.
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