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Genetic Variation: Overview Jay Taylor Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 1 / 34 Motivation Population genetics is the study of genetic variation Estimated frequency of the medionigra morph in the Cothill scarlet tiger moth population 0.12 0.1 frequency 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 0 1935 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 year sources: Fisher & Ford (1947), O’Hara (2005) Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 2 / 34 Motivation We can study polymorphism within populations ... Nair et al. (2003): A selective sweep driven by pyrimethamine treatment in southeast asian malaria parasites. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 3 / 34 Motivation ... as well as divergence between populations. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 4 / 34 Motivation Genetic variation is affected by several interacting processes Mutation and recombination tend to increase variation by creating new genotypes and sometimes re-creating old genotypes that have been lost. Migration can increase local levels of variation. Natural selection alters the genetic composition of populations and can either reduce or increase variation depending on its mode of action. Purifying selection tends to reduce variation. In some cases, balancing selection and diversifying selection can act to maintain variation. Demographic stochasticity (genetic drift) tends to reduce genetic variation through the random loss of rare alleles. Predicting how these processes will influence genetic variation can be difficult, especially when several processes act in the same population. For this reason, we often use mathematical models to generate hypotheses that can be tested with sequence data. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 5 / 34 Motivation Evolution by Natural Selection In 1859, Charles Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace proposed that natural selection could explain how populations become adapted to their environments. Variation within populations - individuals have different traits (phenotypes). height and weight are approximately normally distributed variation for susceptibility to HIV-1 infection and progression to AIDS Selection - traits influence fecundity and survivorship (fitness). larger body size may be beneficial in cold environments height may influence mating success (sexual selection) Heritability - offspring are similar to their parents. variation has both environmental and heritable components differences in height are partly heritable, but are also influenced by childhood nutritition Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 6 / 34 Motivation Example: Beak size in the Medium Ground Finch (Geospiza fortis) Restricted to the Galapagos Islands. Forages mainly on seeds. Large seeds are handled more efficiently by birds with larger bills. Large seeds predominate following drought years (e.g., 1977). Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 7 / 34 Motivation The most serious flaw in Darwin’s theory was his model of heredity, which was based on: blending inheritance - offspring traits are averages of parental traits. This is problematic because it leads to a loss of variation. Ironically, in 1866, Gregor Mendel proposed a particulate model of inheritance: Traits are determined by genes. Each gene can have finitely-many different types called alleles. Different alleles may produce different traits. Offspring are similar to their parents because they inherit parental alleles. Mendel was essentially correct, but his work was largely ignored until it was rediscovered by Hugo de Vries and Carl Correns in 1900. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 8 / 34 Motivation Population Genetics and the Modern Synthesis A coherent theory explaining how natural selection could operate in the context of Mendelian genetics did not appear until the 1930’s with the development of theoretical population genetics (R. A. Fisher, S. Wright, J. B. S. Haldane). Genes are physical entities carried on chromosomes. Heritable variation is produced by mutation and recombination. Selection causes changes in the frequencies of genotypes that in turn affect traits that influence fitness. Population genetics can explain both microevolutionary and macroevolutionary changes. Population genetics focuses on understanding evolution at the molecular level: how does natural selection affect the dynamics of gene frequencies? Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 9 / 34 Motivation Many fundamental problems in evolutionary biology involve population genetics: Neutrality vs. selection: how much of the genome is under selection? Genetics of adaptation: Does adaptation rely mainly on standing variation or on new mutations? How do demography and life history influence the rate of adaptation? Genome evolution: gene duplication, evolution of gene regulatory networks Evolution of sex and recombination Speciation genetics and biodiversity Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 10 / 34 Motivation Population genetics is also used to study problems in ecology and anthropology Atkinson et al. (2008): mtDNA Variation Predicts Population Size in Humans Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 11 / 34 Motivation Pathogen genealogies provide insight into epidemiological processes Grenfell et al. (2004): Unifying the Epidemiological and Evolutionary Dynamics of Pathogens Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 12 / 34 Molecular Genetics The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 13 / 34 Molecular Genetics DNA and RNA are polymers of nucleotides Nucleotides have three components: a 5-carbon sugar: deoxyribose (DNA) or ribose (RNA) a phosphate group linked to the 5’ carbon of the sugar a nitrogenous base linked to the 1’ carbon of the sugar Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 14 / 34 Molecular Genetics Nucleic Acid Sugars Deoxyribose contains one less hydroxyl (-OH) group than ribose. The carbons are numbered clockwise 1’-5’. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 15 / 34 Molecular Genetics Five Nitrogenous Bases A, T, C, G in DNA A, U, C, G in RNA Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 16 / 34 Molecular Genetics Nucleotides polymerize by forming phosphodiester bonds Nucleic acids are oriented and by convention sequences are always written 5’ to 3’. Thus, ATTGCA 6= ACGTTA. Polymerization proceeds 5’ to 3’: RNA and DNA molecules grow by adding new nucleotides at the 3’ end. The addition of new nucleotides is catalyzed by a polymerase. Nucleotides can be removed by nucleases. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 17 / 34 Molecular Genetics Pyrimidine-purine base pairs form by hydrogen bonding A-T and G-C base pairs form in DNA A-T is replaced by A-U in RNA A-T and G-C base pairs have similar dimensions (∼ 2 nm). G-C base pairs have three H-bonds and are more stable than A-T base pairs. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 18 / 34 Molecular Genetics Base pairing allows complementary strands to hybridize Hybridization occurs spontaneously between complementary ssDNA under physiological conditions. Strands are anti-parallel, e.g., ATTGCA is complementary to TGCAAT. Hybridized strands ‘melt’ (disassociate) at high temperatures. Key to replication and transcription of DNA and to many technologies: PCR, microarrays. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 19 / 34 Molecular Genetics DNA replication is semiconservative Each copy contains one of the original strands and one new strand. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 20 / 34 Molecular Genetics The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 21 / 34 Molecular Genetics Proteins are polymers formed from 20 standard amino acids Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 22 / 34 Molecular Genetics The amino acid sequence determines both the structure and function of a protein HIV-1 RT Jay Taylor (ASU) human hemoglobin APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 23 / 34 Molecular Genetics The Genetic Code is Degenerate 20 amino acids 4 nucleotides 43 = 64 codons 1 start codon (AUG) 3 stop codons third position is often degenerate synonymous vs. nonsynonymous mutations Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 24 / 34 Molecular Genetics The Human Karyotype Most human cells are diploid with 23 pairs of chromosomes. 22 pairs of autosomes X, Y sex chromosomes Exceptions: gametes are haploid and have 23 chromosomes; red blood cells lack nuclei altogether. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 25 / 34 Molecular Genetics Contents of the Human Genome 3 billion base pairs per haploid complement 23,000 protein-coding genes: exons (2%), introns (24%) transposable elements (51%) can move around the genome and many can replicate satellite DNA (6%) consists of non-coding tandem repeats Rollins et al. (Genome Research, 2006) Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 26 / 34 Molecular Genetics Mitochondria also have genomes Human mitochondrial genome: circular 16569 bp 13 protein-coding genes 12S and 16S rRNA genes 22 tRNA genes maternally-inherited Mitochondria are sub-cellular organelles that produce chemical energy (ATP). Human cells contain from ten to several thousand mitochondria per cell. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 27 / 34 Mendelian Genetics Mitosis, Meiosis and Mendelian Genetics Eukaryotic cells can divide by two processes: mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis is the process by which diploid somatic cells divide in two. Apart from mutation, the daughter cells are genetically identical to the parent. Meiosis is the process by which diploid germ cells produce haploid gametes (eggs, sperm). This involves two rounds of cell division and results in the production of four gametes. Mendelian genetics (Mendel, 1866) explains how offspring inherit genomes and traits from their parents. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 28 / 34 Mendelian Genetics Mendel’s Law of Segregation A locus is a position in a genome. A diploid cell carries two copies of each locus called alleles. Homozygotes have two identical alleles (PP, pp); heterozygotes have two different alleles (Pp). Each parent transmits just one of these two alleles to each gamete. It is usually the case that both copies are equally likely to be transmitted to the gametes. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 29 / 34 Mendelian Genetics Mendel’s Law of Independent Assortment Each pair of homologous chromosomes segregates independently of the others. Loci on the same chromosome are usually inherited together, but can be reshuffled by recombination. Both inter- and intra-chromosomal recombination are a source of genetic variation. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 30 / 34 Mendelian Genetics Crossing over during meiosis I produces recombinant gametes. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 31 / 34 Mendelian Genetics Recombination Rates Recombination (usually) occurs only between homologous chromosomes. Each pair of homologs undergoes at least one crossover during meiosis, but multiple crossovers can also occur. The probability that two loci recombine is an increasing function of the physical distance (number of base pairs) between them. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 32 / 34 Mendelian Genetics Non-recombining Markers The mitochondrion is maternally inherited and so its genome does not recombine. Most of the Y chromosome is non-recombining, except for two short terminal regions that recombine with the X (pseudo-autosomal regions). Recombination occurs along the entire length of the X chromosome in females. Non-recombining loci share the same genealogy, e.g., the entire mtDNA genome has a single genealogical history. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 33 / 34 Mendelian Genetics References Alberts, B. et al. (2007) Molecular Biology of the Cell. 5’th edition. Garland Science. Krebs, J. E., Goldstein, E. S. and Kilpatrick, S. T. (2011) Lewin’s Genes X. Jones and Bartlett. Sturtevant, A. H. and Lewis, E. B. (2001) A History of Genetics. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Jay Taylor (ASU) APM 504 Jan 13, 2015 34 / 34