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Population Genetics Studying the Distribution of Alleles and Genotypes in a Population Human polymorphism for ABO blood type Evolution • Change in characteristics of organisms • Change in genetic composition (frequency of alleles) in a population • Population = group of organisms of same species occupying a particular geographic region • To study evolution: measure changes in allele frequencies from equilibrium values Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Allelic Frequencies p+q=1 p = frequency of A q = frequency of a Genotypic Frequencies p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 p2= f(AA), q2= f(aa) 2pq = f(Aa) Assumptions Large population size Random mating No selection No migration No mutation Example Using Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Problem 1, page 4-1 Albinism, a lack of skin pigmentation, is caused by the autosomal recessive allele a. The dominant allele A causes skin pigmentation. For a particular population, the frequency of albinos is 0.09. a. What is the frequency of the allele for albinism? b. What is the frequency of the allele for skin pigmentation? c. What is the frequency of individuals with skin pigmentation? d. What is the frequency of individuals who are homozygous for the skin pigmentation allele? e. What is the frequency of individuals who are heterozygous for the albino allele? Frequency of Albinos q p Frequency of AA Frequency of Aa Frequency of aa Genotypic Frequencies as Related to Allele Frequencies for Populations in Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Applied to Sex-linked Genes • Problem 2a, page 4-1 • Colorblindness is an X-linked recessive allele. In a particular population in HardyWeinberg Equilibrium, 1 in 20 males are colorblind. What is the frequency of colorblind females in this population? • Same frequencies of alleles in both genders Solution to Problem 2a, page 4-1 Frequency of Colorblind males Considering only female offspring : Frequency of XB XB Frequency of XB Xb Frequency of Xb Xb Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Applied to Sex-linked Genes • Problem 2b, page 4-1 • In a population that is not in Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium, the frequency of the colorblind allele is 0.1 in females and 0.7 in males. Considering random mating to produce the next generation, what proportion of male offspring will be colorblind? What proportion of the female offspring will be colorblind? • Genders do not have the same allele frequencies Females Males q 0.1 0.7 p 0.9 0.3 Solution to Problem 2b, page 4-1 Considering only female offspring: P(colorblind female) = Considering only male offspring: P(colorblind male) = Perturbations of Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Genetic Drift Changes in allele frequency due to small population sizes Causes of Genetic Drift 1. Population is reduced in size due to limitations in resources 2. Founder Effect: small group of individuals starts a new population 3. Population Bottleneck: population size decreased by chance Perturbations of Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Non-Random Mating Alters the genotypic frequencies of a population Inbreeding • Mating between close relatives is called inbreeding. • Inbreeding increases the probability of homozygosity by descent: becoming homozygous by inheriting two copies of the same allele from one ancestor. • Homozygosity by descent is calculated as (1/2)n where n=number of ancestors in the common pathway. A1/A2 A1/A2 or A2/A3 Matching allele A1 or A2 or A2/A2 From male parent ½ x ½ x ½ = 1/8 Matching allele A3 or A4 A2/A3 or A2/A4 or A3/A3 From female parent ½ x ½ x ½ = 1/8 P(homozygosity by descent) = 1/8 + 1/8 = 1/4 or (1/2)3 + (1/2)3 = 1/4 Additional Problems Involving Inbreeding • Problem 3, page 4-1 • What is the probability of homozygosity by descent of the offspring of a a.parent child - mating? b.aunt-nephew or uncle-niece mating? c.first cousin mating? Solutions to Inbreeding Problems • Problem 3a, page 4-1: • Problem 3b, page 4-1: • Problem 3c, page 4-1: Perturbations of Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Natural Selection Increases the frequency of genotypes with higher fitness Perturbations of Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Migration Can add new alleles, remove alleles or change allele frequency Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Applied to Migration • Problem 2c, page 4-1 • Twenty percent of the males in a certain population are colorblind. A representative group of 1000 migrates to a small, isolated island where there are already 1000 individuals where 30% of the males are colorblind. What is the frequency of colorblind males and females in the new mixed population immediately after immigration? Assume both populations are in HardyWeinberg Equilibrium at all times. Solution to Problem 2c, page 4-1 q= F(XbY) = F(XbXb) = Perturbations of Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Mutation Alters allele frequency, causes formation of new genotypes