Gavrilets, S., and Hastings, A. 1993. ``Maintenance of genetic variability under strong stabilizing selection: a two locus model.'' Genetics 134: 377-386.
ABSTRACT
We study a two locus model with additive contributions to the
phenotype to explore the relationship between stabilizing selection and
recombination. We show that if the double heterozygote has the optimum
phenotype and the contributions of the loci to the trait are different,
then any symmetric stabilizing selection fitness function can maintain
genetic variability provided selection is sufficiently strong relative to
linkage. We present results of a detailed analysis of the quadratic fitness
function which show that selection need not be extremely strong relative to
recombination for the polymorphic equilibria to be stable. At these
polymorphic equilibria the mean value of the trait, in general, is not
equal to the optimum phenotype, there exists a large level of negative
linkage disequilibrium which "hides" additive genetic variance, and
different equilibria can be stable simultaneously. We analyze dependence of
different characteristics of these equilibria on the location of optimum
phenotype, on the difference in allelic effect, and on the strength of
selection relative to recombination. Our overall result that stabilizing
selection does not necessarily eliminate genetic variability is compatible
with some experimental results where the lines subject to strong
stabilizing selection did not have significant reductions in genetic
variability.