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Lecture 16 Tuesday, April 9, 2013 BiSc 001 Spring 2013 Guest Lecture Dr. Jihye Park
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Immediate predecessor of Homo sapiens was Homo erectus http://www.naturalclimatechange.us/Large% 20Images/IMG_0008.jpg ◦ H. erectus first appears in fossil record ~1.8 MYA ◦ H. sapiens first appears in fossil record ~250,000 years ago
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Modern humans descended from African ancestors within the last 200,000 years. http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/ 2011/11/03/modern-humans-wandered- out-of-africa-via-arabia/ ◦ Human populations in Africa have greatest genetic diversity.
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Evolution results in a change in allele frequency. ◦ Allele frequency: the percentage of the gene copies in a population that are of a particular form (allele) If a race is isolated from other races, there are two expectations: ◦ Some alleles unique to the race ◦ Differences in allele frequency compared to other races
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Allele frequencies will remain stable in populations that meet conditions: http://www.kindgreenbuds.com/images/har dy-weinberg-2.jpg ◦ Large size ◦ Random mating ◦ No migration ◦ No natural selection
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HW Theorem is expressed as an equation ◦ p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1 http://lakesideblogs.com/aparrott/Hardy- Weinberg_Human_gametes.gif ◦ p and q are alleles of a gene ◦ p 2 and q 2 are homozygous condition (i.e. AA or aa) ◦ 2pq is heterozygous condition (i.e. Aa)
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Cystic fibrosis, a recessive disease, affects 1 of every 2500 Caucasian babies born in the United States, a frequency of 0.0004. Use the Hardy-Weinberg theorem to calculate following frequencies in this population. The frequency of the cystic fibrosis allele
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Cystic fibrosis, a recessive disease, affects 1 of every 2500 Caucasian babies born in the United States, a frequency of 0.0004. Use the Hardy-Weinberg theorem to calculate following frequencies in this population. The frequency of the cystic fibrosis allele ◦ √0.0004 = 0.02
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The allele y occurs with a frequency of 0.8 in a population of clams. Give the frequency of genotypes YY, Yy, and yy. The frequency of genotype YY The frequency of genotype Yy The frequency of genotype yy
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The allele y occurs with a frequency of 0.8 in a population of clams. Give the frequency of genotypes YY, Yy, and yy. The frequency of genotype YY ◦ (1-0.8) 2 = 0.2 2 = 0.04 The frequency of genotype Yy ◦ 2*0.2*0.8 = 0.32 The frequency of genotype yy ◦ 0.8 2 = 0.64 Check! 0.04 + 0.32 + 0.64 = 1
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No unique alleles are found in all members of one race. Single nucelotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are single base pair in a DNA sequence that can differ from one inidvidual to another. 99% of human genome is the same, the 1% are primarily made of SNPs. http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/1000 genomes/images/main_bg.jpg
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Sickle cell allele Cystic fibrosis allele http://geneed.nlm.nih.gov/images/sickle_c ell_disease_sm.jpg
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The allele distribution of 3 traits that do not cluster based on “race.”
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The movement of alleles from Asian populations into European populations.
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Natural Selection Convergent Evolution Genetic Drift Sexual Selection Assortative Mating http://2.bp.blogspot.com/- gQ3XyGA38bI/UEZGWacqS9I/AAAAAAAAAB g/w2YK7ZVIR5g/s1600/diversity2.jpg
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Sickle cell allele is higher in populations that are malaria- prone. Nose shape is correlated with climate factors.
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Traits shared by unrelated populations due to similarities of environment ◦ Strong correlation between skin color and exposure to UV light
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Effects of UV levels on fitness
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Change in allele frequency that occurs due to chance http://www.hdwallpapersfull.com/wallpaper s/ice-age-4-continental-drift-- 1920x1200.jpg ◦ Humans are highly mobile ◦ Small groups colonizing new areas are prone to genetic drift
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Founder effect – genetic differences resulting from a small sample
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Population bottleneck – genetic change resulting from a dramatic reduction of population numbers
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Chance events – small populations are especially prone to loss of alleles through chance
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When a trait influences chance of mating ◦ Sexual selection often accounts for male/female differences in many animal species
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Tendency of organism to choose mate that resembles self People tend to mate assortatively by height or skin color Positive assortative mating tends to exaggerate differences between groups http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/B iologyPages/K/Koren.jpg
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Modern human history Allele frequency in populations Hardy-Weinberg Theorem conditions and calculation SNPs and human races are not isolated biological groups Human groups are different due to natural selection, convergent evolution, genetic drift (founder effect, bottleneck effect, and by chance), sexual selection, and assortative mating with examples!
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http://www.colourbox.com/preview/64669 24-613405-3d-illustration-social-media- group-of-different-people-around-the- earth.jpg
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