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Microevolution (small scale changes in allele frequencies) Reading and assignment: Chp 18 The Evolution 18.1, 18.7, of Populations 18.8 2004-2005 Part I. Chromosome Nomenclature 2004-2005 What is an allele? slightly different forms of a gene for a given trait (found in sexually reproducing populations) Caused by a difference in an area on a chromosome called a locus a locus (plural loci) is the specific location of a gene or DNA sequence on a chromosome. A variant of the DNA sequence at a given locus is called an allele. 2004-2005 2004-2005 How are alleles named? Chromosomes have banding patterns that are evident with staining; banding patterns correlate with different section of the chromosome. 2004-2005 Each of the bands is numbered, beginning with 1 for the band nearest the centromere 2004-2005 Example: The chromosomal locus of a gene might be written "6p21.3". 6 - The chromosome number. p - The position is on the chromosome's short arm (p for petit in French 21.3 - The numbers that follow the letter represent the position on the arm: band 2, section 1, sub-band 3. 2004-2005 The ends of a chromosome are called telomeres and labeled "ptel" and "qtel", and so "2qtel" refers to the telomere of the long arm of chromosome 2. 2004-2005 Terms to know: What IS a population??? A group of individual of the same species in a specified area What is a gene pool? the genes of a given population What are morphological characteristics? Traits! Two types: a. those with qualitative differences (ex. Blue or brown eyes b. those with quantitative differences (ex. Individuals show a range of incrementally small variations in a trait) 2004-2005 You tell me! Phenotype? Genotype? Dimorphism? (-ic) (ex. X and Y chromosome) Polymorphism? (-ic) (ex. ABO blood group) 2004-2005 Natural selection acts on individuals differential survival (“survival of the fittest”) differential reproductive success (who bears more offspring?) True adaptation and therefore “Evolution,” acts on Populations genetic makeup of population changes over time favorable traits (greater fitness) become more common Birch trees like acid soils 5-6.5 pH and adapt well to coal banks 2004-2005 Part II. How does one get to be the „right‟ variety so that survival is allowed…? There are many factors that influence variations in populations most importantly… 2004-2005 1. Mutations – abrupt inheritable change in a gene Must occur in reproductive cells or gametes (not somatic cells) in order to be passed on Mutation creates variation new mutations are constantly appearing Each human has about 100,000 genes with an average of 2-7 NEW mutations not present in parents 2004-2005 Mutation changes DNA sequence (BASES) Changes amino acid sequence can: change protein change structure? (structural proteins) change function? (enzymes) changes in protein may change phenotype & therefore change fitness See handouts for Protein Synthesis and Amino acid chart!! 2004-2005 Ribosome tRNA mRNA 2004-2005 2 types of mutations: A. Point mutations: single base change in DNA sequence Result: change in : • nucleotide • mRNA • Maybe even amino acid (and therefore protein formed) • Examples: PKU, sickle cell anemia, Tay Sachs, MS, MD, CF 2004-2005 B. Chromosomal mutations Change in chromosome due to duplication, deletion, inversion or translocation Usually more drastic effect on phenotype because so many genes are involved!! Ex. Downs Syndrome and C21 Most of these mutations are BAD, some LETHAL, but some do survive! Gene flips sequence: note color change Switch of parts 2004-2005 Somatic cell mutations may also occur, but are not inheritable (ex. Skin cancer) 2004-2005 2. Sex & Variation Sex is a source and promoter of Variation! one ancestor can have many descendants sex causes recombination of genes offspring have new combinations of traits = new phenotypes Sexual reproduction recombines alleles into new arrangements in every offspring 2004-2005 Events during sexual reproduction that cause new combinations… a. Independent assortment during meiosis Video of Independent Assortment 2004-2005 Crossing over of Alleles in Homologous Chromosomes (see Handout and video) 2004-2005 c. Combination of two parental genomes Occurs at fertilization Combines to form unique individual 2004-2005 PART III. How Variation impacts natural selection Natural selection requires a source of variation within the population there have to be differences some individuals must be more fit than others 2004-2005 What actually changes in populations?? Evolution of populations is really measuring changes in allele frequency all the genes & alleles in a population = gene pool Factors that alter allele frequencies in a population a. natural selection b. genetic drift founder effect bottleneck effect c. gene flow 2004-2005 a. Natural selection Natural selection adapts a population to its environment Ex. When an environment changes… climate change food source availability new predators or diseases Result: combinations of alleles that provide “fitness” increase in the population 2004-2005 b. Recall: Genetic drift Defined: random change in allele frequencies over generations Magnitude of effect is greatest in small populations chance events drive this! founder effect small group splinters off & starts a new colony bottleneck some factor (disaster) reduces population to small number & then population recovers & expands again 2004-2005 Founder effect When a new population is started by only a few individuals some rare alleles may be at high frequency; others may be missing skew the gene pool of new population human populations that started from small group of colonists example: white people colonizing New World 2004-2005 Bottleneck effect When large population is drastically reduced by a disaster famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat… loss of variation by chance alleles lost from gene pool narrows the gene pool 2004-2005 Effects of genetic drift show up in inbred populations! Inbreeding (mating between close relatives) increases the frequency of homozygous individuals, therefore lowering the genetic diversity 2004-2005 Recall the Cheetahs All cheetahs share a small number of alleles less than 1% diversity as if all cheetahs are identical twins 2 bottlenecks 10,000 years ago Ice Age last 100 years poaching & loss of habitat 2004-2005 Conservation issues Bottlenecking is an important concept in conservation biology of endangered species loss of alleles from gene pool reduces variation reduces ability to adapt at risk populations 2004-2005 c. Gene flow (pp 289): defined as: physical movement of alleles in and out of a population by way of immigration (entering a new place)and emigration (leaving a place behind) 2004-2005 Population spread over large area migrations = individuals move from one area to another These sub-populations may have different allele frequencies than larger group Migrations cause genetic mixing across regions = gene flow new alleles are moving into gene pool reduce differences between populations 2004-2005 Gene flow… Counters (goes against) the evolutionary effects of: o mutations o Natural selection o Genetic drift 2004-2005 Human evolution today Gene flow in human populations is increasing today transferring alleles between populations Are we moving towards a blended world? 2004-2005 Reading Assignment for Part I, II and III of this PPT: Reading assignment: Chp 18 18.1, 18.7, 18.8 Complete Activity: Biochemical Evidence for Evolution NOW 2005-2006 Watch TED – Five Fingers of Evolution Directions: 1. Watch this video and take notes – do not do the „dig deeper‟ at this point. 2. Continue with PowerPoint when finished 2005-2006 Part IV. Microevolution Measuring small changes originating in .the genes or alleles and leading to evolution at the population level. Reading assignment: 18.2 pp.280-281 Hardy-Weinberg 2004-2005 Population Genetics – the branch of biology which studies and establishes the genetic basis for evolutionary change Combines Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection with…. Mendel‟s Principles of Genetic 2004-2005 Inheritance Populations & gene pools Concepts 1. A population is a localized group of interbreeding individuals Recall Mendel‟s Simple Cross: P Tt x Tt T Tt t tt F1 TT Tt Tt tt TttT T 2. Gene pool is sum total of all genes or alleles in the population Usually deals with one trait at a time remember difference between alleles & genes! 2004-2005 Allele: one of the alternate genes controlling a particular trait Example: T and t are the alleles which control the trait of tallness. B and b are the alleles that control the trait of eye color. T and B are not alleles, but unrelated genes. Allele frequency is how often an allele occurs in a population refer to gene pool and count the number present : express as % of total. how many A vs. a in whole population 2004-2005 Genotype – the genetic makeup of an individual (usually for one trait) Phenotype – the expression of the Homozygous genotype; the observable trait dominant TT (DNA Protein Observable Trait) Heterozygous Tt Homozygous recessive tt 2004-2005 Hardy-Weinberg Principle (expressed mathematically): the frequencies of genes/alleles (and of genotypes) will remain constant in a population (genetic equilibrium) if evolution is NOT occurring G.H. Hardy mathematician W. Weinberg physician 2004-2005 In order for this (genetic equilibrium) to occur, the following must be true: A non-evolving population will have: 1. very large population size (no genetic drift) 2. no migration (movement in or out) 3. no mutation (no genetic change) 4. random mating (no sexual selection) 5. no natural selection (no selection) Does this ever happen???? Think about it! 2004-2005 Therefore… This serves as a model ONLY! For natural populations are rarely in H-W equilibrium!! 2004-2005 By using their equation we can … … calculate the frequencies of genes and alleles in a population … use it as a base or standard to measure and compare change in the genetic makeup of actual populations (Answers question: Is evolution occurring in this population? And..if so, how much? ) 2004-2005 They realized that there was a correlation between genotypes and the gene or allele frequency Hd het hr Assume that gene .25 .50 .25 has two AA Aa aa alleles A=.5 a = .5 (all the Dom genes + all the rec genes = 100% of genes in the population) 2004-2005 Hardy-Weinberg theorem Alleles assume 2 alleles = B, b frequency of dominant allele (B) = p frequency of recessive allele (b) = q frequencies must add to 100%, so: p+q=1 BB Bb bb 2004-2005 Hardy-Weinberg theorem Individuals frequency of homozygous dominant: p x p = p2 frequency of homozygous recessive: q x q = q2 frequency of heterozygotes: (p x q) + (q x p) = 2pq frequencies of all individuals must add to 100%, so: p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 BB Bb bb 2004-2005 FYI : Math behind the equation p + q = 1 (alleles = 100%) (p + q)2 = 1 (we square this because each trait has 2 alleles) p2 + (p+q) + (p+q) + q2 = 1 p2 + 2(pq) + q2 = 1 Hardy-Weinberg theorem 2005-2006 Problem 1 IF the allele frequency of D is 0.7, what is the allele frequency of d? You must assume HW population (meaning at equilibrium) Answer: Since: p(D) = 0.7 And: p + q = 1 Then: 1 – p = q Therefore: q(d) = 0.3 2005-2006 Problem 2 If the allele freq of g = 0.48, what is the allele freq of G? Assume HW pop in equilibrium Answer: Since: q(g) = 0.48 And: p + q = 1 Then: 1 – q = p Therefore: p(G) = 0.52 2005-2006 Answer (Quest 1) : In a HW population, Since: p(A) = 0.8 And: p + q = 1 the freq of the dominant allele, A, Then: 1 – q = p Therefore: q(a) = 0.2 is 0.8. Problem 3 1. What is the freq of 2. the recessive allele? (a) What are the genotypic freq of AA, Aa, aa? Answer (Quest 2) : „genotypic freq‟ refers to genotype Genotypes have TWO alleles Therefore we use: p2 + 2PQ + q2 = 1 (.8)2 + 2(.8)(.2) + (.2)2 = 1 .64 + .32 + .04 = 1 hd het hr 2005-2006 Problem 4 If 16% of HW population display the recessive aa trait, then what is the freq of the recessive allele, a? If aa (q2)= 0.16 (16%, use decimals!) Then freq of just q („a‟ allele) is 0.4 (square root of 0.16) 2005-2006 Problem 5 49% of the HW population display the recessive (bb) trait. The rest of the population express the dominant phenotype. 1. What is the freq of the recessive allele, b? 2. What are the genotypic freq of BB and Bb? Since q2 (bb) = .49, then q = .7 (Quest 1) Since q = .7 Recall p + q = 1 Then p = .3 (Quest 2) p2 + 2PQ + q2 = 1 (.3)2 + 2(.3)(.7) + (.7)2 = 1 .09 + .42 + .49 = 1 hd het hr 2005-2006 THINK: If 149 are tasters (TT or Tt) Among 212 college which are the (p2 = 2pq), students, 149 are tasters then 63 of the 212 are nonof the chemical, PTC tasters. (phenylthiocarbamide). 63/212 = .3 = q2, then q = .55 The ability to taste PTC (take sq rt of q2) Problem 6 is dominant to the If q = .55, then p = .45 (Quest 1) inability to taste PTC. (Quest 2) 1. What are the freq of the 2 2 = 1 p + 2PQ + q alleles of T and t? (.45)2 + 2(.45)(.55) + (.55)2 = 1 2. What are the genotypic .20 + .50 + .30 = 1 freq within the Hd het hr population? 2005-2006 Class Problem: Who can taste PTC? Find the % of non-tasters in the room = q2 Solve for q and p Substitute in the p2 + 2PQ + q2 = 1 and determine genotypic frequencies! Compare our results with those of the N.Amer population which is: 55% or .55 are tasters (p2 + 2pq) 45% or .45 are non-tasters (q2) Then q = .67 and p = .33 Hint: (always figure q first because we don‟t know if pop is HD or HET!) 2005-2006 Application to determine evolution So…the allele freq (and genotypic freq) can be measured across generations using this approach. If p and q do not change freq from one generation to the next then the population is in equilibrium – neither of the alleles is being selected for or against A change in gene freq is an indicator of natural selection at work! A change in gene freq can be observed if it shows up over generations – remember that populations evolve; individuals don‟t. 2005-2006 How do allele frequencies change? 2004-2005 Modern Synthesis Evolution since Darwin comprehensive theory of evolution took form in early 1940s synthesis of natural selection & Mendelian inheritance (genetics) also called Neo-Darwinism Theodosius Dobzhansky (geneticist) Ernst Mayr (evolutionary biologist) Dobzhansky George Gaylord Simpson (paleontologist Mayr 2004-2005 Real world application of H-W Frequency of allele in human population Example: What % of human population carries allele for PKU (phenylketonuria ) ~ 1 in 10,000 babies born in the US is born with PKU, which results in mental retardation & other problems if untreated disease is caused by a recessive allele PKU = homozygous recessive (aa) 2004-2005 H-W & PKU disease frequency of homozygous recessive individuals q2 (aa) = 1 in 10,000 = 0.0001 frequency of recessive allele (q): q = √0.0001 = 0.01 frequency of dominant allele (p): p (A) = 1 – 0.01 = 0.99 frequency of carriers, heterozygotes: 2pq = 2 x (0.99 x 0.01) = 0.0198 = ~2% ~2% of the US population carries the PKU allele 300,000,000 x .02 = 6,000,000 2004-2005 Instant Replay! Watch TED – Five Fingers of Evolution Directions: 1. Watch this video again, now with a little more perspective! 2. Go to the „flip‟ at this site and ”Dig Deeper” and play the simulation game! 2005-2006 Essential Questions How do populations change over time? What factors can cause changes in populations over time? How did modern understandings of genetics impact evolutionary thought? 2004-2005 Any Questions?? 2005-2006