Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Last day… started covering basics of heredity & Mendelian genetics Mendel’s experiments showed that heredity is particulate, not blending Started to talk about how meiosis leads to new combinations of alleles…
2
1) Homologous chromosomes come together as pairs (tetrad), process called synapsis - chiasmata form – crossing-over of chromatids
3
2) Independent assortment of chromosomes - when chromosomes align during meiosis, chromosome from same parent may move into different cells
4
3) Random fertilization - combination of any sperm with any egg allows trillions of possible combinations
5
New gene combinations detected by Mendel when he crossed peas that differed in 2 characters e.g. pea color (yellow or green) & shape (round or wrinkled Original combinations were found, but also new ones How do new combos arise?
6
Ultimately, genetic variation must come from mutation - many ways for this to happen... Chromosomes may break – fragments may be lost, or added elsewhere Errors also during crossing-over
7
deletion – segment removed duplication – segment repeated - usually harmful - usually lethal
8
inversion – segment in reversed position reciprocal translocation – fragments switched between non-homologous chromosomes - inversions & translocations can change phenotype because gene expression may depend on position
9
Point mutations (change in one nucleotide of DNA) can be caused by chemicals, UV light, errors in replication, etc. - most repaired by enzymes
10
Most mutations are deleterious, some neutral (do not change fitness), a very few are beneficial - generally detrimental, but could not have evolution without them Chapter 14 (esp. pp. 262-75) Paradise Tanager
11
Evolution after Mendel After Darwin, evolution generally accepted but skepticism about natural selection - poor understanding of heredity a problem Mendel’s paper noticed in 1900, & theory of heredity rapidly developed Initially thought Mendelism was in conflict with natural selection - emphasis on major mutations causing discrete traits, not small variations
12
Eventually, population genetics developed, & combined with findings from paleontology, systematics, etc. ‘The Modern Synthesis’ - built on & clarified Darwin’s theory Ronald Fisher J. B. S. Haldane Sewall Wright
14
Population genetics important because populations evolve (individuals do not) - population: localized group of individuals belonging to same species
15
Evolution – change in population’s genetic structure (frequencies of alleles or genotypes) over generations Need pop. genetic theory to understand evolution (quantify & predict), but could be complex – try to simplify – 1 locus, 2 alleles
16
What are genotype frequencies? - if know allele frequency, can calculate random expectation A = gold (dominant)a = silver (recessive) AA =Aa =aa = pop. frequency of AA = “ “ of Aa = “ “ of aa = A =a = If you have: A) 2 golds; B) gold & silver; C) 2 silvers
17
If genotypes are random combinations, should expect: AA = Aa = aa = Are we close? frequency of A = p frequency of a = q freq. of AA = p 2 freq. of Aa = 2pq freq. of aa = q 2
18
p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1 This is Hardy-Weinberg theorem - at equilibrium, genotypes will follow this ratio Equilibrium – nothing happening to pop.
19
Effect of sex: AA = Aa = aa = Much change? - can test statistically ( 2 or chi-square test) If you have: A) 2 golds; B) gold & silver; C) 2 silvers
20
Now, mate with individual of same phenotype AA = Aa = aa = Non-random mating disrupts equilibrium - positive assortative mating reduces freq. of heterozygotes If you have: A) 2 golds; B) gold & silver; C) 2 silvers
21
Now random mating again: AA = Aa = aa = Only takes one generation of random mating to restore pop, to H-W equilibrium! If you have: A) 2 golds; B) gold & silver; C) 2 silvers
22
A population geneticist studies a population of American Robins and finds that the allele for the normal form of alcohol dehydrogenase has a frequency of 0.92 while a recessive allele that produces a defective form of the enzyme has a frequency of 0.08. (Robins often eat fermenting berries, and may get drunk if they have the defective form.) If this population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, what proportion of the population should be homozygous for the recessive allele? What proportion should be heterozygotes?
23
Reminders: - purchase ‘lab manual’/subscription for ‘EvolutionLab’ online (see web page…) - read Chapters 3, 4 & 5 from ‘The Beak of the Finch’ on reserve in Science Library - ‘Natural Selection’ lab assignment due at start of next lab - try practice population genetics question - consider Q&A session in Biology conference room, Sunday 12-1 pm
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.