250 likes | 635 Views
E N D
1. Evolution Lecture 10: Population Genetics:Mutation, Migration and Drift
2. Mutation Mutation adds variation to population
It is, by itself not a powerful force
Imagine we have the following freq:a=0.9 and A=0.1
Say, A is mutated to a at a rate of 1 copy/10,000 generations
Back mutations rarely happen
Observe
4. Mutation and rate of change? Allele frequency change occurs slowly!!
Not a big deal by itself!
This example is at a quick rate of mutation
5. Over long periods, mutation can change allele frequencies
6. Mutation and selection Mutation is a potent evolutionary force when tied to selection
Lenski (1994) took 12 populations of cells and grew them on nutrient poor media (selective environment).
He then took subsamples of each population daily for 1500 days and grew them in fresh media for 10,000 generations
Samples were frozen (still living) at regular intervals. This was so relative fitness of ancestors and descendants could be compared.
He also measured cell size.
Individuals grown in harsh environments produced mutations that allowed it to reproduce quicker
The time from the appearance of a mutation to the fixation of that was so quick we can almost not see it on a graph
8. Mutation-selection balance The rate at which deleterious alleles are being eliminated is equal to the rate at which new copies are made
q=sqrt(u/s), where q is the equilibrium frequency, u is the mutation rate and s is the selection coefficient.
Ranges from 0-1. This tells us the degree of selection against the mutation. If selection coefficient is small and and mutation rate is high, then the equilibrium frequency of that allele will be high.
9. Mutation-Selection Example Spinal muscular atrophy is a neurodegenerative disease and is caused by deletions in the gene telSMN on chromosome 5.
Second most common autosomal recessive allele
It has a freq of 0.01 in Caucasian population and has a selection coefficient of 0.9.
You would expect this allele to become extinct, however, it occurs at 1/100
If we substitute allele freq. for q and selection coefficient for s and solve for u, we get a number that is 9.0 x
10-5 mutations per telSMN allele per generation
When we examine 340 individuals, it was found that 7 of the parents did not have this mutation (brand new mutation)
This rate is 1.1 x 10-4
Very close to estimate
10. Is Cystic fibrosis maintained by mutation-selection balance? Most common genetic disease
LOF of CFTR gene. This is a cell surface protein that is expressed in the lungs and prevents bacterial (Pseudomonas) infection
People of European ancestry seem to have this at a frequency of 0.02.
Using the equation in Box 5.10, we find that the mutation rate creating the new allele would have to be very high (4 x 10-4) with a selection coefficient of 1.0 to maintain an allele frequency of 0.02.
However, the real mutation rate is 6.7 x 10-7. Therefore, the frequency at 0.02 cannot be maintained by a steady supply of mutations
Is it possible, the allele is being maintained by overdominance…heterozygote superiority?
11. Pseudomonas
12. Cystic fibrosis and het. superiority? It is possible that heterozygous individuals cystic fibrosis are resistant to typhoid fever?
The CFTR protein is also found in the gut.
Typhoid bacteria (Salmonella) exploit this protein to cross the gut and increase infection
If you look at normal CFTR in homozyg., het., and homoz. with loss of both CFTR (F508) copies..you see
14. Selection for cyst fibrosis gene after a typhoid outbreak
15. Migration The movement of alleles between populations
Migration can be caused by anything that moves alleles. Dispersal of animals, pollen on the wind etc.
16. Amounts of gene flow?
17. Migration can obviously change allele frequencies!!
18. Migration as a mechanisms of evolution Water snakes (Nerodia sipedon) in Lake eerie come in two color phases: banded and unbanded
This is a two allele system
Banded dominant to unbanded
The mainland has really only banded
The islands may have both
21. Lake Erie water snakes It was found that, when basking on islands, the unbanded snakes are more cryptic and thus remain hidden better.
Why wouldn’t selection cause the unbanded pattern to go to fixation?
Migration. Every year, banded snakes migrate from the mainland and introduce fresh banded alleles
Therefore, migration offsets selection
23. Unopposed migration Migration may be opposed by selection
If not, migration tends to homogenize populations
If gene flow from the mainland to the island was not opposed by selection, than the island would be homogenized by banded color patterns
Fst statistics predict the amount of allelic variation from 0-1. High numbers indicate high variation
24. Age of flower populations and diversity
25. Next time, genetic drift!!!