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Chapter 19: Population genetics. Fig. 19-1. Population genetics Population : interbreeding members of a species Three major principles of Darwinian evolutionary theory: variation for traits exists within populations selection applies to a subset of those traits
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Chapter 19: Population genetics Fig. 19-1
Population genetics • Population: interbreeding members of a species • Three major principles of Darwinian evolutionary theory: • variation for traits exists within populations • selection applies to a subset of those traits • (selection can act only upon variations) • traits are genetically transmitted
Polymorphism: multiple forms of a gene are • commonly found in a population • (all studied populations are “wildly” polymorphic) • chromosomal polymorphisms • immunological polymorphisms • protein polymorphisms • nucleic acid sequence/structure polymorphisms
p = (2 x MM) + (1 x MN) = frequency of M allele q = (2 x NN) + (1 x MN) = frequency of N allele Therefore, frequency of MN reflects the genetic variation in a population
“Factoids” regarding protein polymorphisms • in most species: • structural polymorphisms are displayed by • about one-third of all proteins • typically, about 10% of the individuals in • a large population are heterozygous for • polymorphisms of an average gene • Therefore, enormous protein-level variation • exists in most populations
Electrophoretic allelic variants of esterase-5 in Drosophila Fig. 19-2
Electrophoretic variants of hemoglobin A in humans Fig. 19-3
Enormous naturally-occuring variation (polymorphism) in protein sequence
Enormous naturally-occuring variation (polymorphism) in chromosomal rearrangements
Restriction sites within Drosophila xdh gene (58 wild chromosomes sampled) 4-base sites in 4.5 kb DNA * Site present in minority of chromosomes 0/1 Site in ½ of chromosomes Enormous naturally-occuring variation (polymorphism) in nucleotide sequence Fig. 19-5
Enormous naturally-occuring variation (polymorphism) in tandem repeat arrays (VNTRs)
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Random mating within a large population assures a stable equilibrium of genetic diversity in subsequent generations provided that certain assumptions apply: Mating is random (no biased mating, infinite population size) Allele frequencies do not change (no selection, no migration, etc.)
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium • For a two-allele system, all genotypes exist as a simple • product of the frequency of each allele: • homozygotes = p2or q2 • heterozygotes = 2pq • p2 + 2pq + q2= 1 Box 19-2
Allele frequencies determine frequencies of homozygotes and heterozygotes Rare alleles are almost always found in heterozygotes, almost never homozygous Fig. 19-6
Another measure of heterozygosity is haplotype diversity Haplotype: combination of non-allelic alleles on a single chromosome
MN allele and genotype frequencies reflect Hardy-Weinberg assumptions Allele and genotype frequencies can vary between populations, while exhibiting H-W equilibria within each population
Non-random mating: inbreeding (mating among relatives) Positive inbreeding: Mating among relatives is more common than random Increases frequencies of homozygotes in a population Fig. 19-7
Extreme inbreeding: self-fertilization results in loss of heterozygosity No change in p or q; change only in heterozygosity and diversity Fig. 19-8
Negative inbreeding (enforced outbreeding) -barriers to inbreeding are common attributes of successful populations Positive assortative mating - individuals chose “like” mates (not necessarily relatives) Negative assortative mating - individuals choose dissimilar mates
Sources of variation • Mutation – very slow
Mutation is the ultimate source of variation But spontaneous mutations occur at extremely low frequencies
Mutation frequency is influenced by allele frequency Mutation alone is a very slow evolutionary force and cannot directly account for diversity observed in populations. Box 19-3
Sources of variation • Mutation – very slow • Recombination – rapidly mixes genes to • provide new genetic combinations in • a population • Migration – gene flow among different • populations changes gene frequencies
Selection: directed change in genotypes in a population Fitness: survival and reproduction success; function of genotype and environment
Fitness can be obvious (mortality, sterililty) • HbS/HbS: severe anemia, low survival • HbS/HbA: apparent resistance to malaria • or more subtle/partial/conditional
Fitness (viability) of various homozygotes as a function of temperature Drosophila pseudoobscura Fig. 19-9
Enhanced fitness of a genotype will enrich those genes in subsequent generations of that population Frequencies of positively selected genes increase over time Frequencies of negatively selected genes decrease over time Change in A frequency (p) is greatest where p = q Fig. 19-11
For a two-allele system, mean fitness (W) in a population is the proportional contribution of fitness by each genotype (A/A, A/a, a/a) W = p2WA/A + 2pqWA/a + q2Wa/a WA/A and WA/a > Wa/ap should increase q should decrease Wa/a > WA/A and WA/aq should increase p should decrease
Fitness can account for allele frequency changes over time p for malic dehydrogenase electrophoretic mobility variant MDHF where WS/S=1, WS/F=0.75, WF/F=0.4 Fig. 19-12
Selection: directed change in genotypes in a population Fitness: survival and reproduction success; function of genotype and environment Frequency independent selection: fitness is independent of genotype frequency Frequency dependent selection: fitness changes as genotype frequency changes
Random genetic drift: random changes in gene • frequency that can lead to extinction/fixation • of genes • Requires no selection • Essentially “sampling error” inherent in • each generation in achieving Hardy- • Weinberg equilibrium • Most exaggerated in small populations • (especially “founder effects”) • Allows isolated populations to diverge • without differential selection (each • experiences its own drift history)
Model: history of emergence of ten mutations and their drift in a population over time Drift to extinction for nine; drift to p=1 in one Fig. 19-13
Drift explains differences in unselected allele frequencies in isolated populations
Genetic change is directed by diverse evolutionary forces which tend to increase (blue) or decrease (red) variation