158 CHAPTER 6
and environmental effects on the phenotype are more difficult to control, much
larger sample sizes are needed with GWAS.
Another approach that is used to find human QTL takes advantage of the dis-
tinctive traits seen in some populations. The strategy is to scan the genome for
loci that have large allele frequency differences among populations with divergent
phenotypes. This strategy has discovered QTL that underlie adaptive evolution of
traits that include disease resistance, body height, and tolerance to high elevation
and cold (FIGURE 6.28).
QTL mapping identifies regions of chromosomes that can range in size from a
few hundred to many hundreds of thousands of DNA bases. A single QTL often
spans several genetic loci. Other research strategies are needed to find which DNA
base or bases within a QTL are responsible for the phenotypic variation. The cause
is sometimes discovered to be just a single nucleotide. In other cases, several loci or
a chromosomal rearrangement are responsible (see Figure 6.23).
The genetics of quantitative traits
One of the most basic questions we can ask about the genetics of quantitative
traits is how many loci contribute to their phenotypic variation. The answer is
important for several reasons. Population genetics theory tells us that if many loci
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_06.28.ai Date 11-10-2016 01-10-2017
Marine
diet
Lactose
tolerance
Malaria
resistance
Cholera
resistance
Arsenic-rich
environment
Cold
climate
Elevation Light skin
pigmentation
Short
stature
FIGURE 6.28 QTL involved in adaptive evolution of several traits in humans have been
identified by correlating large differences in allele frequencies among populations
with distinct phenotypes. (After [51].)
06_EVOL4E_CH06.indd 158 3/23/17 9:04 AM