Models of Molecular Evolution I Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.1 – 7.2.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Micro Evolution -Evolution on the smallest scale
Advertisements

D3.7 Evidence for evol part III jackie. Biochemical evidence provided by the universality of DNA and protein structures for the common ancestry of living.
Do Now Write the answers in your notebooks. 1. What is the difference between a genotype and a phenotype? 2. What are alleles?
Chapter 19 Evolutionary Genetics 18 and 20 April, 2004
Lecture 21: Introduction to Neutral Theory and Phylogenetics March 31, 2014.
Random fixation and loss of heterozygosity
Exam Thursday Covers material through Today’s lecture Practice problems and answers are posted Bring a calculator 5 questions, answer your favorite 4 Please.
Change in frequency of the unbanded allele (q) as a function of q for island populations. Equilibrium points a)Strong selection for q, little migration.
Plant of the day! Pebble plants, Lithops, dwarf xerophytes Aizoaceae
14 Molecular Evolution and Population Genetics
From population genetics to variation among species: Computing the rate of fixations.
1 Mendelian Genetics in Populations II Migration, Genetic Drift, and Nonrandom Mating.
BIOE 109 Summer 2009 Lecture 6- Part II Molecular evolution.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL SEQUENCE ANALYSIS Molecular Evolution Course #27615 Anders Gorm Pedersen Molecular Evolution Group Center for Biological Sequence.
Molecular Clocks, Base Substitutions, & Phylogenetic Distances.
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL SEQUENCE ANALYSIS Molecular Evolution Course #27615 Anders Gorm Pedersen Molecular Evolution Group Center for Biological Sequence.
Genes Within Populations
Molecular phylogenetics
- any detectable change in DNA sequence eg. errors in DNA replication/repair - inherited ones of interest in evolutionary studies Deleterious - will be.
Evolution: Lamarck Evolution: Change over time Evolution: Change over time Lamarck Lamarck Use / disuse Use / disuse Theory of inheritance of ACQUIRED.
Molecular Clock. Rate of evolution of DNA is constant over time and across lineages Resolve history of species –Timing of events –Relationship of species.
Section 4 Evolution in Large Populations: Mutation, Migration & Selection Genetic diversity lost by chance and selection regenerates through mutation.
Chapter 23 The Evolution of Populations. Population Genetics u The study of genetic variation in populations. u Represents the reconciliation of Mendelism.
Part VI and Chapter 20 Biology Sixth Edition Raven/Johnson (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Genes Within Populations
Evidence for Evolution ORGANIZE YOUR THOUGHTS! EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION  The Fossil Record  Radiometric Dating  Morphology  Homology  Molecular Biology.
Evolution Chapters Evolution is both Factual and the basis of broader theory What does this mean? What are some factual examples of evolution?
Models of Molecular Evolution II Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.3 – 7.4.
Deviations from HWE I. Mutation II. Migration III. Non-Random Mating IV. Genetic Drift V. The Neutral Theory.
The Molecular Clock? By: T. Michael Dodson. Hypothesis For any given macromolecule (a protein or DNA sequence) the rate of evolution is approximately.
The Biology and Genetic Base of Cancer. 2 (Mutation)
Chapter 24: Molecular and Genomic Evolution CHAPTER 24 Molecular and Genomic Evolution.
Models of Molecular Evolution III Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.5 – 7.8.
Section 6 Maintenance of Genetic Diversity Levels of genetic diversity result from the joint impacts of: Mutation & migration adding variation Chance &
Cédric Notredame (08/12/2015) Molecular Evolution Cédric Notredame.
Selectionist view: allele substitution and polymorphism
Evolution of Populations. The Smallest Unit of Evolution Natural selection acts on individuals, but only populations evolve – Genetic variations contribute.
Lecture 20 : Tests of Neutrality
Types of mutations Mutations are changes in the genetic material
Evidence to Support Evolutionary Theory
Lecture 20: Introduction to Neutral Theory
NEW TOPIC: MOLECULAR EVOLUTION.
Objective: Chapter 23. Population geneticists measure polymorphisms in a population by determining the amount of heterozygosity at the gene and molecular.
In populations of finite size, sampling of gametes from the gene pool can cause evolution. Incorporating Genetic Drift.
Chapter 13 Vocabulary 12 Words Quiz Friday April 5th.
Population Genetics. The Gene Pool Members of a species can interbreed & produce fertile offspring Species have a shared gene pool Gene pool – all of.
Announcement NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Awards (USRA) in Universities 16 weeks $5,625
Section 2: Modern Systematics
Causes of Variation in Substitution Rates
The neutral theory of molecular evolution
Chapter 23: The Evolution of Populations
Human Chimp How does DNA evolve? Nucleotide substitutions
4.1 Chromosomes, genes, alleles and mutations
Section 2: Modern Systematics
Deviations from HWE I. Mutation II. Migration III. Non-Random Mating
Mechanisms of Evolution
Chapter 23 The Evolution of Populations
The Evolution of Populations
Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.
What are the Patterns Of Nucleotide Substitution Within Coding and
1. "HARD" Selection can 'cost' a population individuals:
Molecular Clocks Rose Hoberman.
D.5: Phylogeny and Systematics
Evidence for Evolution
Evolutionary genetics
Evolution by Genetic Drift : Main Points (p. 231)
Evolution Study Guide.
Evolution and Natural Selection
Evolution by Genetic Drift : Main Points (p. 231)
Biology: Life on Earth (Audesirk)
Presentation transcript:

Models of Molecular Evolution I Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.1 – 7.2

Myr ago Dayhoff distance (to humans) Fossil divergence time Molecular divergence time The  -globin molecular clock Baboon Cow Quoll Chicken AlligatorFrog Carp Shark

The  -globin molecular clock As relationships between species diverge, number of amino acid differences appear to increase proportionally Assuming the divergence time of one of the points is known (humans and cows diverged 80 Myr ago), other divergence times can be calculated: 17 of 149 amino acids (Dayhoff distance 0.131) differ between humans and cows 47 differences (Dayhoff distance 0.445) between humans and alligators Suggests that humans and alligators diverged 3.4 times as long ago as humans and cows (~270 Myr ago) Fossil record suggests that humans and alligators diverged ~300 Myr ago: a-haemoglobin is behaving like a molecular clock

Processes of molecular evolution Why should such a clock exist and how accurate is it? Answer to this question will give insights into how nucleotide and amino acid sequences evolve Since the 1960s there have been two conflicting models of how molecular evolution takes place: One (neutralist) is dominated by the genetic drift of neutral mutations The other (selectionist) states that natural selection of advantageous mutations is more important Knowing which model best explains molecular evolution will ultimately lead to development of more realistic models of DNA substitution and thus allow the construction of more accurate phylogenies

The classical and balance schools of population genetics Foundation of the neutralist-selectionist debate was laid in the 1950s in the debate between the classical and balance schools of population genetics: The classical school believed that natural selection was predominantly a purifying force, removing deleterious alleles, and that there would be little genetic variation in populations The balance school claimed that levels of genetic variation were so high that most loci were polymorphic and that individuals were heterozygous at a large number of loci – this scenario was maintained by balancing (overdominant) selection Both schools were agreed that natural selection was the driving force in evolution but there was no evidence for the divisive issue: how much genetic variation existed within and between species?

Levels of variation in allozymes Proportion of polymorphic loci Heterozygosity Mammals Birds Fish All vertebrates Reptiles Plants European humans Amphibians Insects exc. Drosophila All invertebrates Invertebrates exc. insects Drosophila

The cost of natural selection and the rise of the neutral theory Technical advances had revealed that the balance school was correct concerning levels of variation These results posed a problem: If natural selection had produced all this diversity, would it not also be true that individuals with inferior alleles would be selectively removed from the population? The population could go extinct with all this “selective death” - this is known as the cost of natural selection Cost of natural selection is part of the overall genetic load – the loss of overall fitness due to deleterious alleles: — Reason why classical school through there was low variation — This would be appropriate for substitutional load

Segregational load Occurs when a polymorphism is maintained due to overdominant selection Classic example is human sickle-cell anaemia: Individuals homozygous for Hb A haemoglobin allele produce normal haemoglobin Individuals homozygous for Hb S haemoglobin allele produce mutant haemoglobin (sickle cell-anaemia: 80% fatal) but are much less susceptible to malaria Heterozygous individuals do not suffer from sickle-cell anaemia and are much more resistant to malaria Laws of Mendelian segregation show that individuals who are susceptible to malaria (Hb A /Hb A ) or to sickle-anaemia (Hb S /Hb S ) will still be produced

The neutral theory of molecular evolution High levels of genetic variation could be maintained in populations without excessive selective death if natural selection was not the driving force in molecular evolution Neutral mutations could be lost (usually) or fixed (very occasionally) by genetic drift: The neutral theory of molecular evolution suggests that mutation and drift predominate The selectionist school believed that selection was the dominant force Both agree that selection removes deleterious alleles Central dogma of chance vs. necessity

Neutralist and selectionist models of molecular evolution Deleterious Neutral AdvantageousNeutralistSelectionist

The neutralist-selectionist debate Neutralist theory is not anti-Darwinist: Claims that fixation through selection – the main process of morphological evolution – occurs at low frequency Effectively believes that most genes and proteins are already almost-optimally adapted through selection Current debate centres around four major predictions of the neutral theory: There is an inverse correlation between substitution rate and degree of functional constraint acting on a gene Patterns of base composition and codon usage reflect mutational rather than selective processes There is a constant rate (molecular clock) of sequence evolution Level of within species variation is a product of only population size and mutation rate

Functional constraint and amino acid substitution Rates of amino acid substitution are extremely variable: Fibrinopeptides evolve 900 times faster than histones To neutralists, this difference is explainable by differences in selective constraint, rather than positive selection The more functionally constrained a gene is, the higher the chance that a mutation will be deleterious Correlation between functional constraint and substitution rate is proposed as evidence for the neutral theory

Functional constraint and amino acid substitution Functionally constrained gene Less functionally constrained gene Non-coding DNA Deleterious Neutral

Functional constraint at the nucleotide level Gene Mouse  3 Human  1 Rabbit  2 Goat  x and  z AveragePseudogene Position Position Position Functional genes Rates of nucleotide substitution per site, per year x 10 -9