Title: Evolution, dispersal of genetics and Fishers equation
1Evolution, dispersal of genetics and Fishers
equation
2Charles Darwin (12 February 1809 19 April 1882)
- On the Origin of Species (1859)
- Many individuals of s species are destined to die
before reaching reproduction age. - Advantageous gene tends to be persevered, thus
change the characteristics of the species - Evolution by natural selection (slight
modifications are passed on through generations) - But how does it work?
3Gregor Mendel (1822-1884)
- Study of the inheritance of traits in pea plants.
Over a period of 7 years he bred and counted
about 28,000 pea plants. - Traits are passed through generations unchanged,
a child can inherit the trait from either its
mother or its father - The trait is determined by two factors, one
inherited from each parent, and it comes with
probability from either parent - For pairs of contrasting traits, one of the two
is dominant and always overrules the other
(recessive) factor - Trait - a variant for a character
- Character - a heritable feature
- Factor Mendels factor is gene today
4Experiments on Plant Hybridization, Gregor Mendel
(1865, Proceedings of the Natural History
Society) http//www.mendelweb.org/Mendel.html
(original paper)
- Mendel compared seven discrete traits
- Smoothness of the seeds.
- Color of the seeds.
- Color of the seed coats.
- Shape of the pods.
- Color of unripe pods.
- Position of flowers.
- Length of the stems.
- Through experimentation, Mendel discovered that
one inheritable trait would invariably be
dominant to its recessive alternative. This
model, later known as Mendelian inheritance or
Mendelian genetics, provided an alternative to
blending inheritance, which was the prevailing
theory at the time. Unfortunately, Mendel's work
received little attention from the scientific
community and was largely forgotten. It was not
until the early 20th century that Mendel's work
was rediscovered and his ideas used to help form
the modern synthesis.
5Plant material Mendel used sweet pea
6Examples of Mendel traits
Difference in the color of the seed
albumen Yellow (I) and green (i) cotyledons
Difference in the form of the ripe seeds Round
(R) and wrinkled (r) cotyledons
Difference in the color of the seed coat Colored
(A) and white (a) flowers
Difference in the color of the unripe pods Green
(Gp) or yellow (gp) pod wall
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9Genetic Terms
- Phenotype - the outward, physical appearance of a
particular trait (Pea round or wrinkled seed
phenotype yellow or green seed phenotype) - Genotype - genetic make-up of a particular trait,
the specific allelic combination of a certain
gene (AA, BB, or AB) - Allele - one alternative form of a given allelic
pair (A or B) - Homozygote - an individual which contains only
one allele at the allelic pair (AA or BB) - Heterozygote - an individual which contains one
of each member of the gene pair (AB) - Dominant - the allele that expresses itself at
the expense of an alternate allele the phenotype
that is expressed in the F1 generation from the
cross of two pure lines - Recessive - an allele whose expression is
suppressed in the presence of a dominant allele
the phenotype that disappears in the F1
generation from the cross of two pure lines and
reappears in the F2 generation
10More general, the probabilities (frequencies) of
allele A or a in a population can be p and q,
where pq1. Then the probability of each
genotype in F2 is AA p2 Aa 2pq aa
q2 Hardy-Weinbergs law the frequency remain
the same for each genotype
11Wilhelm Weinberg (1862 1937)
G. H. Hardy (1877-1947)
12Assumptions in Hardy-Weinbergs Law
- Expected sex ratio is independent of genotype
- Mating is random
- Fertility is independent of genotype
- Survivorship is independent of genotype
- There is no mutation or migration
- Different survival rate or fertility rate for the
two genotypes could break Hardy-Weinbergs law
13Evolution of genes under selectionFisher-Haldane
-Wright equation
14Ronald Fisher (1890-1962)J. B. S. Haldane
(1892-1964)Sewall Wright (1889-1988)
Darwin-Wallace Medal is a medal awarded by the
Linnean Society of London every 50 years,
beginning in 1908, 50 years after the joint
presentation by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel
Wallace of two scientific papers - On the
Tendency of Species to form Varieties and on the
Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural
Means of Selection - to the Linnean Society of
London on 1 July 1858. It is awarded for "major
advances in evolutionary biology"
15Some special cases
16Evolution to advantageous gene numerical
solutions by Matlab
(upper) dominant and advantageous, left
s0.002, right s0.2 (lower) dominant and
recessive, left s0.002, right s0.2
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20Finally, Fishers equation with diffusion !
21Traveling wave of Fishers equation
22Finding Traveling wave solution
23Phase portrait Analysis
24Problem solved!