Mutations - JeongAPbiology
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Transcript Mutations - JeongAPbiology
Chapter 23~
The Evolution of
Populations
Microevolution – change in allele frequency of a
population over generations (evolution on the
smallest scale)
Mutations – the only source of new genes and new
alleles
Point Mutations – change in one base of a gene
AGCCTA AGCTTA
Chromosomal Mutations – delete, disrupt,
duplicate, rearrange many loci at once
Sexual Recombination offers the most common
genetic variation
1) crossing over during Prophase I of Meiosis
2) independent assortment of chromosomes
(chromosomes pairing up in different combinations)
3) fertilization (so many sperm to choose from!)
Population Genetics – study of how populations change
genetically over time
Population – groups of individuals of the same species living
in the same area at the same time
Gene Pool – all the alleles of all the individuals of a
population
***if all members of a population are homozygous for the same
allele, they are termed: “FIXED”
Hardy-Weinberg Theorem – used to describe
a population that is NOT evolving
The population will remain constant over
time, unless “forces” change it
Populations remaining the same is not likely,
therefore allele frequencies change…leading
populations to evolve
In order for Hardy-Weinberg to display no
evolution occurring three conditions must be
met
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
No mutations
Random mating
No natural selection
Large population
No gene flow
***If there are any of these
things occurring, then HW
equilibrium cannot be met
p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1
p+q=1
“p” is dominant (so p^2 is homozygous dominant)
“q” is recessive (so q^2 is homozygous recessive)
That make “pq” heterozygous
[this equation is used to predict the frequencies
(percentage) of the distribution of alleles]
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Suppose in a plant population that red flowers (R) are
dominant to white flowers (r). In a population of 500
individuals, 25% show recessive phenotype. How many
individuals would you expect to be homozygous dominant and
heterozygous for this trait?
“q^2” frequency is 25% (or 0.25), which means “q” must be
0.5
p + q = 1 (this is reduced from p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1), so “p”
must also be 0.5
p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1
From the reading 25% were recessive (125 individuals)
We deduced 25% are Homo. Dom. (125 individuals)
That means 50% are heterozygous (250 individuals)
***BUT then again this is a perfect world, in reality it might
not be so nice with the numbers
Population:
a localized group of individuals
belonging to the same species
Species:
a group of populations whose
individuals have the potential to interbreed
and produce fertile offspring
Gene pool:
the total aggregate of genes in a
population at any one time
Population genetics:
the study of genetic changes in
populations
Modern synthesis/neo-Darwinism
“Individuals are selected, but populations
evolve.”
Serves as a model for the
genetic structure of a
nonevolving population
(equilibrium)
5 conditions:
1- Very large population size;
2- No migration;
3- No net mutations;
4- Random mating;
5- No natural selection
p=frequency of one allele (A); q=frequency of the other
allele (a);
p+q=1.0 (p=1-q & q=1-p)
P2=frequency of AA genotype; 2pq=frequency of Aa plus
aA genotype; q2=frequency of aa genotype;
p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1.0
A change in the gene
pool of a population
over a succession of
generations
1- Genetic drift:
changes in the gene
pool of a small
population due to
chance (usually
reduces genetic
variability)
The Bottleneck
Effect: type of genetic
drift resulting from a
reduction in population
(natural disaster) such
that the surviving
population is no longer
genetically
representative of the
original population
Founder Effect:
a cause of genetic drift
attributable to
colonization by a
limited number of
individuals from a
parent population
2- Gene Flow:
genetic exchange due to
the migration of fertile
individuals or gametes
between populations
(reduces differences
between populations)
3- Mutations:
a change in an organism’s
DNA (gametes; many
generations); original
source of genetic
variation (raw material
for natural selection)
4- Nonrandom
mating: inbreeding
and assortive mating
(both shift
frequencies of
different genotypes)
5- Natural Selection:
differential success in
reproduction;
only form of
microevolution that
adapts a population
to its environment
Polymorphism:
coexistence of 2 or more
distinct forms of
individuals (morphs)
within the same
population
Geographical
variation: differences
in genetic structure
between populations
(cline)
Prevention of natural selection’s
reduction of variation
Diploidy
2nd set of chromosomes hides
variation in the heterozygote
Balanced polymorphism
1- heterozygote advantage
(hybrid vigor; i.e.,
malaria/sickle-cell anemia);
2- frequency dependent
selection (survival &
reproduction of any 1 morph
declines if it becomes too
common; i.e., parasite/host)
Fitness: contribution
an individual makes
to the gene pool of
the next generation
3 types:
A. Directional
B. Diversifying
C. Stabilizing
Sexual dimorphism:
secondary sex
characteristic distinction
Sexual selection:
selection towards
secondary sex
characteristics that leads
to sexual dimorphism