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Population Genetics. u The study of genetic variation in populations.

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Presentation on theme: "Population Genetics. u The study of genetic variation in populations."— Presentation transcript:

1 Population Genetics

2 u The study of genetic variation in populations.

3 Population u A localized group of individuals of the same species.

4 Species u A group of similar organisms. u A group of populations that could interbreed.

5 Gene Pool u The total aggregate of genes in a population. u If evolution is occurring, then changes must occur in the gene pool of the population over time.

6 Microevolution u Changes in the relative frequencies of alleles in the gene pool.

7 Hardy-Weinberg Theorem u Developed in 1908. u Mathematical model of gene pool changes over time.

8 Basic Equation u p + q = 1 u p = % dominant allele u q = % recessive allele

9 Expanded Equation u p + q = 1 u (p + q) 2 = (1) 2 u p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1

10 Genotypes u p 2 = Homozygous Dominants 2pq = Heterozygous q 2 = Homozygous Recessives

11 Example Calculation u Let’s look at a population where: u A = red flowers u a = white flowers

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13 Starting Population u N = 500 u Red = 480 (320 AA+ 160 Aa) u White = 20 u Total Genes = 2 x 500 = 1000

14 Dominant Allele u A = (320 x 2) + (160 x 1) = 800 = 800/1000 A = 80%

15 Recessive Allele u a = (160 x 1) + (20 x 2) = 200/1000 =.20 a = 20%

16 A and a in HW equation u Cross: Aa X Aa u Result = AA + 2Aa + aa u Remember: A = p, a = q

17 Substitute the values for A and a u p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1 (.8) 2 + 2(.8)(.2) + (.2) 2 = 1.64 +.32 +.04 = 1

18 Dominant Allele u A = p 2 + pq =.64 +.16 =.80 = 80%

19 Recessive Allele u a = pq + q 2 =.16 +.04 =.20 = 20%

20 Result u Gene pool is in a state of equilibrium and has not changed because of sexual reproduction. u No Evolution has occurred.

21 Importance of Hardy-Weinberg u Yardstick to measure rates of evolution. u Predicts that gene frequencies should NOT change over time as long as the HW assumptions hold. u Way to calculate gene frequencies through time.

22 Example u What is the frequency of the PKU allele? u PKU is expressed only if the individual is homozygous recessive (aa).

23 PKU Frequency u PKU is found at the rate of 1/10,000 births. u PKU = aa = q 2 q 2 =.0001 q =.01

24 Dominant Allele u p + q = 1 p = 1- q p = 1-.01 p =.99

25 Expanded Equation u p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1 (.99) 2 + 2(.99x.01) + (.01) 2 = 1.9801 +.0198 +.0001 = 1

26 Final Results u Normals (AA) = 98.01% u Carriers (Aa) = 1.98% u PKU (aa) =.01%

27 AP Problems Using Hardy-Weinberg u Solve for q 2 (% of total). u Solve for q (equation). u Solve for p (1- q). u H-W is always on the national AP Bio exam (but no calculators are allowed).

28 Hardy-Weinberg Assumptions 1. Large Population 2. Isolation 3. No Net Mutations 4. Random Mating 5. No Natural Selection

29 If H-W assumptions hold true: u The gene frequencies will not change over time. u Evolution will not occur. u But, how likely will natural populations hold to the H-W assumptions?

30 Microevolution u Caused by violations of the 5 H-W assumptions.

31 Causes of Microevolution 1. Genetic Drift 2. Gene Flow 3. Mutations 4. Nonrandom Mating 5. Natural Selection

32 Genetic Drift u Changes in the gene pool of a small population by chance. u Types: u 1. Bottleneck Effect u 2. Founder's Effect

33 By Chance

34 Bottleneck Effect u Loss of most of the population by disasters. u Surviving population may have a different gene pool than the original population.

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36 Result u Some alleles lost. u Other alleles are over- represented. u Genetic variation usually lost.

37 Importance u Reduction of population size may reduce gene pool for evolution to work with. u Ex: Cheetahs

38 Founder's Effect u Genetic drift in a new colony that separates from a parent population. u Ex: Old-Order Amish

39 Result u Genetic variation reduced. u Some alleles increase in frequency while others are lost (as compared to the parent population).

40 Importance u Very common in islands and other groups that don't interbreed.

41 Gene Flow u Movement of genes in/out of a population. u Ex: u Immigration u Emigration

42 Result u Changes in gene frequencies.

43 Mutations u Inherited changes in a gene.

44 Result u May change gene frequencies (small population). u Source of new alleles for selection. u Often lost by genetic drift.

45 Nonrandom Mating u Failure to choose mates at random from the population.

46 Causes u Inbreeding within the same “neighborhood”. u Assortative mating (like with like).

47 Result u Increases the number of homozygous loci. u Does not in itself alter the overall gene frequencies in the population.

48 Natural Selection u Differential success in survival and reproduction. u Result - Shifts in gene frequencies.

49 Comment u As the Environment changes, so does Natural Selection and Gene Frequencies.

50 Result u If the environment is "patchy", the population may have many different local populations.

51 Genetic Basis of Variation 1. Discrete Characters – Mendelian traits with clear phenotypes. 2. Quantitative Characters – Multigene traits with overlapping phenotypes.

52 Polymorphism u The existence of several contrasting forms of the species in a population. u Usually inherited as Discrete Characteristics.

53 Examples Garter SnakesGaillardia

54 Human Example u ABO Blood Groups u Morphs = A, B, AB, O

55 Other examples

56 Quantitative Characters u Allow continuous variation in the population. u Result – u Geographical Variation u Clines: a change along a geographical axis

57 Yarrow and Altitude

58 Sources of Genetic Variation u Mutations. u Recombination though sexual reproduction. u Crossing-over u Random fertilization

59 Preserving Genetic Variation 1. Diploidy - preserves recessives as heterozygotes. 2. Balanced Polymorphisms - preservation of diversity by natural selection.

60 Example u Heterozygote Advantage - When the heterozygote or hybrid survives better than the homozygotes. Also called Hybrid vigor.

61 Result u Can't bred "true“ and the diversity of the population is maintained. u Ex – Sickle Cell Anemia

62 Comment u Population geneticists believe that ALL genes that persist in a population must have had a selective advantage at one time. u Ex – Sickle Cell and Malaria, Tay-Sachs and Tuberculosis

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64 Fitness - Darwinian u The relative contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation.

65 Relative Fitness u Contribution of one genotype to the next generation compared to other genotypes.

66 Rate of Selection u Differs between dominant and recessive alleles. u Selection pressure by the environment.

67 Modes of Natural Selection 1. Stabilizing 2. Directional 3. Diversifying 4. Sexual

68 Stabilizing u Selection toward the average and against the extremes. u Ex: birth weight in humans

69 Directional Selection u Selection toward one extreme. u Ex: running speeds in race animals. u Ex. Galapagos Finch beak size and food source.

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71 Diversifying u Selection toward both extremes and against the norm. u Ex: bill size in birds

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73 Comment u Diversifying Selection - can split a species into several new species if it continues for a long enough period of time and the populations don’t interbreed.

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75 Sexual Mate selection u May not be adaptive to the environment, but increases reproduction success of the individual.

76 Result u Sexual dimorphism. u Secondary sexual features for attracting mates.

77 Comments u Females may drive sexual selection and dimorphism since they often "choose" the mate.

78 The Origin of Species

79 Biological Species u A group of organisms that could interbreed in nature and produce fertile offspring.

80 Key Points u Could interbreed. u Fertile offspring.

81 Speciation Requires: 1. Variation in the population. 2. Selection. 3. Isolation.

82 Reproductive Barriers u Serve to isolate a populations from other gene pools. u Create and maintain “species”.

83 Modes of Speciation 1. Allopatric Speciation 2. Sympatric Speciation Both work through a block of gene flow between two populations.

84

85 Allopatric Speciation u Allopatric = other homeland u Ancestral population split by a geographical feature. u Comment – the size of the geographical feature may be very large or small.

86 Example u Pupfish populations in Death Valley. u Generally happens when a specie’s range shrinks for some reason.

87 Another Example

88 Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation 1. Founder's Effect - with the peripheral isolate. 2. Genetic Drift – gives the isolate population variation as compared to the original population.

89 Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation 3. Selection pressure on the isolate differs from the parent population.

90 Result u Gene pool of isolate changes from the parent population. u New Species can form.

91 Comment u Populations separated by geographical barriers may not evolve much. u Ex - Pacific and Atlantic Ocean populations separated by the Panama Isthmus.

92 Examples u Fish - 72 identical kinds. u Crabs - 25 identical kinds. u Echinoderms - 25 identical kinds.

93 Adaptive Radiation u Rapid emergence of several species from a common ancestor. u Common in island and mountain top populations or other “empty” environments. u Ex – Galapagos Finches

94 Mechanism u Resources are temporarily infinite. u Most offspring survive. u Result - little Natural Selection and the gene pool can become very diverse.

95 When the Environment Saturates u Natural Selection resumes. u New species form rapidly if isolation mechanisms work.

96 Sympatric Speciation u Sympatric = same homeland u New species arise within the range of parent populations. u Can occur In a single generation.

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98 Plants u Polyploids may cause new species because the change in chromosome number creates postzygotic barriers.

99 Polyploid Types 1. Autopolyploid - when a species doubles its chromosome number from 2N to 4N. 2. Allopolyploid - formed as a polyploid hybrid between two species. u Ex: wheat

100 Autopolyploid

101 Allopolyploid

102 Animals u Don't form polyploids and will use other mechanisms.

103 Gradualism Evolution u Darwinian style evolution. u Small gradual changes over long periods time.

104 Gradualism Predicts: u Long periods of time are needed for evolution. u Fossils should show continuous links.

105 Problem u Gradualism doesn’t fit the fossil record very well. (too many “gaps”).

106 Punctuated Evolution u New theory on the “pacing” of evolution. u Elridge and Gould – 1972.

107 Punctuated Equilibrium u Evolution has two speeds of change: u Gradualism or slow change u Rapid bursts of speciation

108 Predictions u Speciation can occur over a very short period of time (1 to 1000 generations). u Fossil record will have gaps or missing links.

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110 Predictions u New species will appear in the fossil record without connecting links or intermediate forms. u Established species will show gradual changes over long periods of time.

111 Possible Mechanism u Adaptive Radiation, especially after mass extinction events allow new species to originate. u Saturated environments favor gradual changes in the current species.

112 Comment u Punctuated Equilibrium is the newest ”Evolution Theory”. u Best explanation of fossil record evidence to date.

113 Evolutionary Trends u Evolution is not goal oriented. It does not produce “perfect” species.

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115 Future of Evolution ? u Look for new theories and ideas to be developed, especially from new fossil finds and from molecular (DNA) evidence.


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