摘要

The variability of the products of polymerase chain reactions, due to mutations and to incomplete replications, can have important clinical consequences. Sun (1995) and Weiss and von Haeseler (1995) modeled these errors by a branching process and introduced estimators of the mutation rate and of the efficiency of the reaction based, for example, on the empirical distribution of the mutations of a random sequence. This distribution involves a noncanonical branching Markov chain which, although easy to describe, is not analytically tractable except in the infinite-population limit. These authors for the infinite-target limit, and Wang et al. (2000) for finite targets, solved the infinite-population limit. In this paper, we provide bounds of the difference between the finite-target finite-population case and its finite-target infinite-population approximation. The bounds are explicit functions of the efficiency of the reaction, the mutation rate per site and per cycle, the size of the target, the number of cycles, and the size of the initial population. They concern every moment and, what might be more surprising, the histogram itself of the distributions. The bounds for the moments exhibit a phase transition at the value 1 - 1/N = 3/4 of the mutation rate per site and per cycle, where N = 4 is the number of letters in the encoding alphabet of DNA and RNA. Of course, in biological contexts, the mutation rates are much smaller than 3/4.

  • 出版日期2002