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11/3/2012 Population Genetics Hardy-Weinberg • G.H. Hardy • Wilhelm Weinberg • Published independently in early 20th century • Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium model – Serves as a null model – Model for diploid organisms – Allele frequencies are constant if • • • • No selection No mutation Random mating No movement into (immigration) or out of (emigration) the population • Population infinite HWE as an orgy Relative Allele Frequencies • Frequencies are simply the number of occurrences • Relative frequencies are the proportions of occurrences • Must sum to 1.0 – If 100 individuals, what is the relative frequency of A1 and A2 if 14 individuals are homozygous A1 A1, 63 are heterozygous and 23 are homozygous A2 A2 – A1 = A2 = 1 11/3/2012 Mind your p’s and q’s • • • • • Example of HWE p = f[A1] = f[A1]+ f[A1]/2 q= f[A2] = f[A2]+ f[A2]/2 p+q=1 p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 HWE predictions p and q is constant HWE Example: Takata et al. 2002 • f[A1]= p=0.755, q=0.245 • Expected values – f[A1A1] = p? = ? – f[A1A2] = ?pq = ? – f[A2A2] = q? = ? • Observed – f[A1A1] = 0.59 – f[A1A2] = 0.33 – f[A2A2] = 0.08 HWE with natural selection • Selection coefficient (s) • Fitness (w) – Scaled to 1 – Fitness of most fittest = 1 – Other alleles, w = 1- s • How well does expected = observed? 2 11/3/2012 HWE with natural selection • Simulations – deterministic – http://darwin.eeb.uconn.edu/simulations/selectio n.html • Possible outcomes – Fixation • 1 or 0 – Balanced polymorphism What we learned • In terms of fixation, polymorphisms and rates describe: • Frequency of A1 in dominant/recessive model – Selection against dominant: – Selection against recessive: • Frequency of A1 in codominance model • Frequency of A1 in overdominance model – Starting p = 0.5, 0.1, 0.9 • Frequency of A1 in underdominance model – Starting p = 0.5, 0.1, 0.9 Frequency dependent selection • Just showed frequency-independent selection – Values are constant • Frequency-dependent selection – Positive: increasing fitness with increasing frequency – Negative: the rarer the allele the higher the fitness Mutation and HWE 3 11/3/2012 Mutations Mutation Rates 4 11/3/2012 Mutations in a 2 allele system Mutations and HWE • p’ = p(1-µ) + qν, where p’ is frequency of p at t+1 and p* • Where p* is the frequency of A1 at equilibrium Try changing values of mu and nu 5 11/3/2012 One more term for phylogenetics • Autapomorphy • Plesiomorphy • Symplesiomorphy Coalescent Theory • Gene Trees vs. Phylogenetic Trees – Phylogenetic trees show the relationships among taxa – Gene trees show the relationship among different forms of the gene • Genetic Drift • http://darwin.eeb.uconn.edu/simulations/drif t.html Coalescent Theory • Figure 8.14 • 8.14A . Gene copes i, ii, and iii coalesce at the red dot • 8.14B. All gene copies coalesce at the green dot 6 11/3/2012 Coalescent Theory • Time to coalesce is 2N for a randomly chosen pair of gene copies • Time to coalesce is 4N for a larger set of gene copies Coalescent Theory and You! • Mitochondrial DNA show coalesce 200,000 years ago • Y chromosome has genes that coalesce at 35,000 years ago • Human-Neanderthal: 400,000 years ago Natural section and molecular evolution • If a gene mutation does not affect fitness (i.e., is neutral) then the frequency of the mutation is equivalent to the mutation rate • If a mutation is beneficial (i.e., increases fitness) then it should increase in frequency – Positive selection • If a mutation is deleterious (i.e., decreases fitness) then it should be less frequent – Purifying selection 7 11/3/2012 Pleiotropy and selection Read chapters 11 and 12 8