LBA ProtPars. LBA Prot Dist no Gamma and no alignment.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution most base substitutions are selectively neutral drift dominates evolution at the molecular level Under drift, rate.
Advertisements

IMPRS workshop Comparative Genomics 18 th -21 st of February 2013 Lecture 4 Positive selection.
Evolution of genomes.
Quick Lesson on dN/dS Neutral Selection Codon Degeneracy Synonymous vs. Non-synonymous dN/dS ratios Why Selection? The Problem.
Change in frequency of the unbanded allele (q) as a function of q for island populations. Equilibrium points a)Strong selection for q, little migration.
Plant of the day! Pebble plants, Lithops, dwarf xerophytes Aizoaceae
Molecular Evolution GE3M17 Mario A. Fares. Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution Dobzhansky, 1973.
Molecular Evolution Revised 29/12/06
Molecular evolution:   how do we explain the patterns of variation observed in DNA sequences? how do we detect selection by comparing silent site substitutions.
14 Molecular Evolution and Population Genetics
MCB 5472 The Queue, Phylogenetic Reconstruction and Selection Peter Gogarten Office: BSP 404 phone: ,
1 Detecting selection using phylogeny. 2 Evaluation of prediction methods  Comparing our results to experimentally verified sites Positive (hit)Negative.
The gradualist point of view Evolution occurs within populations where the fittest organisms have a selective advantage. Over time the advantages genes.
MCB 372 Phylogenetic reconstruction Peter Gogarten Office: BSP 404 phone: ,
From population genetics to variation among species: Computing the rate of fixations.
The gradualist point of view Evolution occurs within populations where the fittest organisms have a selective advantage. Over time the advantages genes.
Molecular Evolution with an emphasis on substitution rates Gavin JD Smith State Key Laboratory of Emerging Infectious Diseases & Department of Microbiology.
The gradualist point of view Evolution occurs within populations where the fittest organisms have a selective advantage. Over time the advantages genes.
Positive selection A new allele (mutant) confers some increase in the fitness of the organism Selection acts to favour this allele Also called adaptive.
Molecular Clocks, Base Substitutions, & Phylogenetic Distances.
Molecular Evolution, Part 2 Everything you didn’t want to know… and more! Everything you didn’t want to know… and more!
MCB 371/372 quartets positive selection 4/20/05 Peter Gogarten Office: BSP 404 phone: ,
Adaptive Molecular Evolution Nonsynonymous vs Synonymous.
Chapter 3 Substitution Patterns Presented by: Adrian Padilla.
- any detectable change in DNA sequence eg. errors in DNA replication/repair - inherited ones of interest in evolutionary studies Deleterious - will be.
Origins and impact of constraints in evolution of gene families Boris E. Shakhnovich and Eugene V.Koonin Genome Research 2006, October 19 Stella Veretnik.
In the deterministic model, the time till fixation depends on the selective advantage, but fixation is guaranteed.
Molecular basis of evolution. Goal – to reconstruct the evolutionary history of all organisms in the form of phylogenetic trees. Classical approach: phylogenetic.
Selection versus drift The larger the population the longer it takes for an allele to become fixed. Note: Even though an allele conveys a strong selective.
Models of Molecular Evolution I Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.1 – 7.2.
Bioinformatics 2011 Molecular Evolution Revised 29/12/06.
Introduction to Bioinformatics.
Calculating branch lengths from distances. ABC A B C----- a b c.
Identifying and Modeling Selection Pressure (a review of three papers) Rose Hoberman BioLM seminar Feb 9, 2004.
Models of Molecular Evolution III Level 3 Molecular Evolution and Bioinformatics Jim Provan Page and Holmes: Sections 7.5 – 7.8.
Introduction to History of Life. Biological evolution consists of change in the hereditary characteristics of groups of organisms over the course of generations.
Chapter 10 Phylogenetic Basics. Similarities and divergence between biological sequences are often represented by phylogenetic trees Phylogenetics is.
Selectionist view: allele substitution and polymorphism
N=50 s=0.150 replicates s>0 Time till fixation on average: t av = (2/s) ln (2N) generations (also true for mutations with negative “s” ! discuss among.
Asymmetric Sequence Divergence of Duplicate Genes Experimented By: Gavin Conant and Andreas Wagner Presented By: Jennifer Case and Jonathan Hobbs.
NEW TOPIC: MOLECULAR EVOLUTION.
Why could a gene tree be different from the species tree? Lack of resolution Lineage sorting Gene duplications/gene loss (paralogs/orthologs) Gene transfer.
Testing the Neutral Mutation Hypothesis The neutral theory predicts that polymorphism within species is correlated positively with fixed differences between.
In populations of finite size, sampling of gametes from the gene pool can cause evolution. Incorporating Genetic Drift.
Modelling evolution Gil McVean Department of Statistics TC A G.
Schematic of Eukaryotic Protein-Coding Locus
BME 130 – Genomes Lecture 20 Population Genomics I.
Lecture 6 Genetic drift & Mutation Sonja Kujala
Evolution of gene function
Causes of Variation in Substitution Rates
The neutral theory of molecular evolution
Neutrality Test First suggested by Kimura (1968) and King and Jukes (1969) Shift to using neutrality as a null hypothesis in positive selection and selection.
Linkage and Linkage Disequilibrium
Maximum likelihood (ML) method
The Neutral Theory M. Kimura, 1968
Evolution of Eukaryotic Genome Gene 342
Intro to microbial evolution
PROCESS OF EVOLUTION.
Distances.
Models of Sequence Evolution
Molecular basis of evolution.
Schematic of Eukaryotic Protein-Coding Locus
What are the Patterns Of Nucleotide Substitution Within Coding and
Testing the Neutral Mutation Hypothesis
1. "HARD" Selection can 'cost' a population individuals:
S=.2 s=.1.
S=.2 s=.1.
Phylogenetic reconstruction
Pedir alineamiento múltiple
DN/dS.
Presentation transcript:

LBA ProtPars

LBA Prot Dist no Gamma and no alignment

LBA Prot Dist with Gamma and no alignment

LBA Prot Dist with Gamma and alignment

LBA phyml no-alignment

LBA phyml Gamma = 1 no alignment – true homologous positions with muscle alignment log 10 (x)

LBA phyml Gamma = 1 no alignment – true homologous positions with clustalo alignment log 10 (x)

LBA phyml no-alignment A C DB still resolved by ml

Muscle alignment clustalo

Neutral theory: The vast majority of observed sequence differences between members of a population are neutral (or close to neutral). These differences can be fixed in the population through random genetic drift. Some mutations are strongly counter selected (this is why there are patterns of conserved residues). Only very seldom is a mutation under positive selection. The neutral theory does not say that all evolution is neutral and everything is only due to to genetic drift.

Nearly Neutral theory: Even synonymous mutations do not lead to random composition but to codon bias. Small negative selection might be sufficient to produce the observed codon usage bias.

s=0 Probability of fixation, P, is equal to frequency of allele in population. Mutation rate (per gene/per unit of time) = u ; freq. with which allele is generated in diploid population size N =u*2N Probability of fixation for each allele = 1/(2N) Substitution rate = frequency with which new alleles are generated * Probability of fixation= u*2N *1/(2N) = u = Mutation rate Therefore: If f s=0, the substitution rate is independent of population size, and equal to the mutation rate !!!! (NOTE: Mutation unequal Substitution! ) This is the reason that there is hope that the molecular clock might sometimes work. Fixation time due to drift alone: t av =4*N e generations (N e =effective population size; For n discrete generations N e = n/(1/N 1 +1/N 2 +…..1/N n )

s>0 Time till fixation on average: t av = (2/s) ln (2N) generations (also true for mutations with negative “s” ! discuss among yourselves) E.g.: N=10 6, s=0: average time to fixation: 4*10 6 generations s=0.01: average time to fixation: 2900 generations N=10 4, s=0: average time to fixation: generations s=0.01: average time to fixation: generations N=10 11 (100 billion – size of the Prochlorococcus population), s=0: average time to fixation: 4*10 11 generations (about 1 billion years) s=0.01: average time to fixation: 5200 generations (about 14 years) Test question: What is the probability of fixation? => substitution rate of mutation under positive selection is larger than the rate with which neutral mutations are fixed.

Positive selection (s>0) A new allele (mutant) confers some increase in the fitness of the organism Selection acts to favour this allele Also called adaptive selection or Darwinian selection. NOTE : Fitness = ability to survive and reproduce Modified from from

Random Genetic Drift Selection Allele frequency advantageous disadvantageous Modified from from

s=0

For advantageous mutations: Probability of fixation, P, is approximately equal to 2s; e.g., if selective advantage s = 5% then P = 10% t av =2/s*log2N generations = 40*log100= 80

S=.2 => shorter fixation time.

Advantageous allele Herbicide resistance gene in nightshade plant Modified from from

selection versus drift The larger the population the longer it takes for an allele to become fixed. Note: Even though an allele conveys a strong selective advantage of 10%, the allele has a rather large chance to go extinct. Note#2: Fixation is faster under selection than under drift. Question: Can you think of genes that have a higher fixation probability? (Hint: HGT)

Negative selection (s<0) A new allele (mutant) confers some decrease in the fitness of the organism Selection acts to remove this allele Also called purifying selection Modified from from

Deleterious allele Human breast cancer gene, BRCA2 Normal (wild type) allele Mutant allele (Montreal 440 Family) 4 base pair deletion Causes frameshift Stop codon 5% of breast cancer cases are familial Mutations in BRCA2 account for 20% of familial cases Modified from from

Neutral mutations Neither advantageous nor disadvantageous Invisible to selection (no selection) Frequency subject to ‘drift’ in the population Random drift – random changes in small populations

Types of Mutation-Substitution Replacement of one nucleotide by another Synonymous (Doesn’t change amino acid) – Rate sometimes indicated by Ks – Rate sometimes indicated by d s Non-Synonymous (Changes Amino Acid) – Rate sometimes indicated by Ka – Rate sometimes indicated by d n (this and the following 4 slides are from mentor.lscf.ucsb.edu/course/ spring/eemb102/lecture/Lecture7.ppt)

Genetic Code – Note degeneracy of 1 st vs 2 nd vs 3 rd position sites

Genetic Code Four-fold degenerate site – Any substitution is synonymous From: mentor.lscf.ucsb.edu/course/spring/eemb102/lecture/Lecture7.ppt

Genetic Code Two-fold degenerate site – Some substitutions synonymous, some non-synonymous From: mentor.lscf.ucsb.edu/course/spring/eemb102/lecture/Lecture7.ppt

Degeneracy of 1 st vs 2 nd vs 3 rd position sites results in 25.5% synonymous changes and 74.5% non synonymous changes (Yang&Nielsen,1998). Genetic Code

Measuring Selection on Genes Null hypothesis = neutral evolution Under neutral evolution, synonymous changes should accumulate at a rate equal to mutation rate Under neutral evolution, amino acid substitutions should also accumulate at a rate equal to the mutation rate From: mentor.lscf.ucsb.edu/course/spring/eemb102/lecture/Lecture7.ppt

Counting #s/#a Ser Ser Ser Ser Ser Species1 TGA TGC TGT TGT TGT Ser Ser Ser Ser Ala Species2 TGT TGT TGT TGT GGT #s = 2 sites #a = 1 site #a/#s=0.5 Modified from: mentor.lscf.ucsb.edu/course/spring/eemb102/lecture/Lecture7.ppt To assess selection pressures one needs to calculate the rates (Ka, Ks), i.e. the occurring substitutions as a fraction of the possible syn. and nonsyn. substitutions. Things get more complicated, if one wants to take transition transversion ratios and codon bias into account. See chapter 4 in Nei and Kumar, Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetics.

Testing for selection using dN/dS ratio dN/dS ratio ( aka Ka/Ks or ω (omega) ratio) where dN = number of non-synonymous substitutions / number of all possible non-synonymous substitutions dS =number of synonymous substitutions / number of all possible non-synonymous substitutions dN/dS >1 positive, Darwinian selection dN/dS =1 neutral evolution dN/dS <1 negative, purifying selection

dambe Two programs worked well for me to align nucleotide sequences based on the amino acid alignment, One is DAMBE (only for windows). This is a handy program for a lot of things, including reading a lot of different formats, calculating phylogenies, it even runs codeml (from PAML) for you.DAMBE The procedure is not straight forward, but is well described on the help pages. After installing DAMBE go to HELP -> general HELP -> sequences -> align nucleotide sequences based on …- > If you follow the instructions to the letter, it works fine. DAMBE also calculates Ka and Ks distances from codon based aligned sequences.

dambe (cont)

PAML (codeml) the basic model