Lab 6: Genetic Drift and Effective Population Size

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lab 10: Mutation, Selection and Drift
Advertisements

Alleles = A, a Genotypes = AA, Aa, aa
Lab 6: Genetic Drift and Effective Population Size.
 Genetic drift causes allele frequencies to change in populations  Alleles are lost more rapidly in small populations.
Discover Biology FIFTH EDITION
MIGRATION  Movement of individuals from one subpopulation to another followed by random mating.  Movement of gametes from one subpopulation to another.
Lecture 9: Introduction to Genetic Drift February 14, 2014.
Modeling Populations forces that act on allelic frequencies.
Exam Thursday Covers material through Today’s lecture Practice problems and answers are posted Bring a calculator 5 questions, answer your favorite 4 Please.
 Read Chapter 6 of text  Brachydachtyly displays the classic 3:1 pattern of inheritance (for a cross between heterozygotes) that mendel described.
 Establishes a benchmark from a non- evolving population in which to measure an evolving population.  Investigates the properties of populations that.
The Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Allele Frequencies in a Population G.H. Hardy English Mathematician Dr. Wilhelm Weinberg German Physician.
Discovery of a rare arboreal forest-dwelling flying reptile (Pterosauria, Pterodactyloidea) from China Wang et al. PNAS Feb. 11, 2008.
Section 3 Characterizing Genetic Diversity: Single Loci Gene with 2 alleles designated “A” and “a”. Three genotypes: AA, Aa, aa Population of 100 individuals.
Forward Genealogical Simulations Assumptions:1) Fixed population size 2) Fixed mating time Step #1:The mating process: For a fixed population size N, there.
Population Genetics A.The Hardy-Weinberg principle B.Factors that can change allele frequencies.
1 Midterm Exam: Weds. 15 March what’s covered on the test? Lecture material through 14 March Text reading assignments.
Population Genetics What is population genetics?
Salit Kark Department of Evolution, Systematics and Ecology The Silberman Institute of Life Sciences The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Conservation Biology.
One-way migration. Migration There are two populations (x and y), each with a different frequency of A alleles (px and py). Assume migrants are from population.
Evolutionary Change in Populations: Population Genetics, Selection & Drift.
Population Genetics. Macrophage CCR5 CCR5-  32.
 Read Chapter 6 of text  We saw in chapter 5 that a cross between two individuals heterozygous for a dominant allele produces a 3:1 ratio of individuals.
Introducing the Hardy-Weinberg principle The Hardy-Weinberg principle is a mathematical model used to calculate the allele frequencies of traits with dominant.
Taylor Pruett AP biology 3 rd block.  British mathematician Godfery H. Hardy and German physician Wilhelm Weinberg.
Lamarck vs Darwin worksheet Bell Ringer
The Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
The Hardy-Weinberg Equation
Population Genetics Learning Objectives
Medical Genetics 08 基因变异的群体行为 Population Genetics.
HARDY-WEINBERG EQUILIBRIUM
Evolution and Population Genetics
MIGRATION  Movement of individuals from one subpopulation to another followed by random mating.  Movement of gametes from one subpopulation to another.
Population Genetics is the study of the genetic
1 1 Population Genetics. 2 2 The Gene Pool Members of a species can interbreed & produce fertile offspring Species have a shared gene pool Gene pool –
The Evolution of Populations Chapter 23 Biology – Campbell Reece.
Population Genetics youtube. com/watch
How to: Hardy - Weinberg
Terms: Population: Group of interbreeding or potentially interbreeding organisms Population Genetics: Branch of genetics that studies the genetic makeup.
Population genetics and Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
Lecture 3: population genetics I: mutation and recombination
POPULATION GENETICS 1. Outcomes 4. Discuss the application of population genetics to the study of evolution. 4.1 Describe the concepts of the deme and.
1 Random Genetic Drift 2 Conditions for maintaining Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium: 1. random mating 2. no migration 3. no mutation 4. no selection 5.infinite.
Lab 6: Genetic Drift and Effective population size.
Course outline HWE: What happens when Hardy- Weinberg assumptions are met Inheritance: Multiple alleles in a population; Transmission of alleles in a family.
AP Biology Lab 7: Genetics (Fly Lab). AP Biology Lab 7: Genetics (Fly Lab)  Description  given fly of unknown genotype use crosses to determine mode.
1 Population Genetics Definitions of Important Terms Population: group of individuals of one species, living in a prescribed geographical area Subpopulation:
Lab 7. Estimating Population Structure. Goals 1.Estimate and interpret statistics (AMOVA + Bayesian) that characterize population structure. 2.Demonstrate.
Lab 5: Selection.
Allele Frequencies: Staying Constant Chapter 14. What is Allele Frequency? How frequent any allele is in a given population: –Within one race –Within.
Remainder of Chapter 23 Read the remaining materials; they address information specific to understanding evolution (e.g., variation and nature of changes)
Population Genetics.
Evolution of Populations. The Smallest Unit of Evolution Natural selection acts on individuals, but only populations evolve – Genetic variations contribute.
Mechanisms of Evolution  Lesson goals:  1. Define evolution in terms of genetics.  2. Using mathematics show how evolution cannot occur unless there.
Population Genetics & Evolution. Population Genetics The study of evolution from a genetic point of view.
By Mireya Diaz Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics for EECS 458.
Diversity Loss in General Estimation of Distribution Algorithms J. L. Shapiro PPSN (Parallel Problem Solving From Nature) ’06 BISCuit 2 nd EDA Seminar.
Genome Evolution. Amos Tanay 2010 Genome evolution Lecture 4: population genetics III: selection.
In populations of finite size, sampling of gametes from the gene pool can cause evolution. Incorporating Genetic Drift.
Lab 5: Selection. Relative fitness(ω)  Average number of surviving progeny of one genotype compared to a competitive genotype.  Survival rate = “N”
By Bryce Perry and Cecil Brown
(23) Evolution of Populations- Microevolution Natural selection acts on individuals, but only populations evolve. Consider, for example, a population of.
Evolution of Populations. Individual organisms do not evolve. This is a misconception. While natural selection acts on individuals, evolution is only.
Evolution of Populations
Lecture 6 Genetic drift & Mutation Sonja Kujala
MIGRATION Movement of individuals from one subpopulation to another followed by random mating. Movement of gametes from one subpopulation to another followed.
Is the CFTR allele maintained by mutation/selection balance?
Speciation: Down the bottleneck?
MIGRATION Movement of individuals from one subpopulation to another followed by random mating. Movement of gametes from one subpopulation to another followed.
Evolution: Requirements for
Presentation transcript:

Lab 6: Genetic Drift and Effective Population Size

Goals To calculate the probability of fixation or loss of an allele. To estimate mean time until fixation of an allele. To estimate effective population size affected by past cataclysms. To learn how genetic drift and selection interact in populations of various Ne.

What is MC method? The (pseudo-random) number generator has certain characteristics (e.g., a long "period" before the sequence repeats) The (pseudo-random) number generator produces values that pass tests for randomness There are enough samples to ensure accurate results It simulates the phenomenon in question.

p = ? p = ?

Probability of fixation or loss Genetic drift results from chance changes in allele frequencies that result from sampling of gametes from generation to generation in a finite population.

2. Exact probability of fixation of an allele is equal to the initial frequency of that allele in absence of selection. 3. Probability of fixation of an allele can be calculated empirically by using Monte Carlo simulations as implemented in Populus.

Important assumption for Genetic Drift model in Populus Population size is assumed to remain constant from generation to generation Allelic frequency changes result only from the random sampling process

Problem 1 (15 minutes). The frequencies of alleles A1 and A2 are p = 0.7 and q = 0.3, respectively. Use Populus to empirically estimate the probabilities of fixation and loss for each of these alleles. What do you think are the exact probabilities of fixation and loss for each allele? Do these probabilities depend on the population size?

Problem 2 (15 minutes). Consider a population with the following genotype counts: Case A1A1 A1A2 A2A2 1 18 4 3 2 7 21 Use Populus to empirically estimate the mean time (in number of generations) until fixation for allele A1 for each case. Show the mean time until fixation of A1 calculated using the diffusion approximation (given above) for each case. Discuss the reasons for the differences (if any) between the two types of estimates. What are some of the assumptions underlying each method?

Mean time until fixation of an allele depends on population size and initial frequency of that allele. A1A1(N11) A1A2 (N12) A2A2(N22) N p q T(p) T(p) in terms of N 16 2 20 0.85 0.15 26.78 1.34N 18 0.05 0.95 77.96 3.90N

Effective population size Effective Population Size: Effects of Different Numbers of Males and Females Table courtesy of K. Ritland

Problem 3 (15 minutes). The census population size of an isolated population of finches on the Galapagos Islands is as follows. What is the effective population size in 2010? Year Females Males 1930 120 250 1950 15 290 1970 350 1990 1500 2500 2010 3500 5000 Dr. Robert Rothman, Rochester Institute of Technology http://people.rit.edu/rhrsbi/GalapagosPages/DarwinFinch.html

When time is discontinuous, a transition matrix can be used to determine the probability of fixation in the next generation.

Fitness in terms of s and h (adaptive Darwinian selection) 1 + s Genotype A1A1 A1A2 A2A2 Fitness ω11 ω12 ω22 Fitness in terms of s and h (adaptive Darwinian selection) 1 + s 1 + hs 1 (purifying selection) 1 − hs 1 − s Using traditional setup for adaptive Darwinian (positive) selection These can be easily converted to terms for purifying selection

Problem 4 (15 minutes). If adaptive Darwinian selection (characterized by h = 0.5 and s = 0.25) is operating on a locus and the frequency of allele A1 at that locus is p = 0.25, predict whether A1 is more likely to get lost or to become fixed: In a population with Ne = 10. In a population with Ne = 30. For each of the two cases, calculate the probability of fixation of A1 empirically (i.e., using Populus). If Ne affects the probabilities of fixation and loss of A1, explain why. If not, explain why not.

Problem 5. GRADUATE STUDENTS ONLY: Starting with the conditions in Problem 4-a), calculate the probability that: The frequency of A1 becomes 0.1 in the next generation. A1 becomes fixed in the next generation. If the two transition probabilities differ dramatically, explain why. If not, explain why not.