Title: Plant Speciation
1Plant Speciation Evolution (PBIO 475/575)
- Molecular Components
- of Heredity
2DNA Double Helix
- Sugar-phosphate backbone
- Base-pair "rungs" of ladder
- Nucleotides attached to S-P molecules
- Strands antiparallel (run in opposite directions,
5'--3')
Raven et al. (1992)
3DNA Double Helix
- Each base-pair "rung" has a purine (A or G) and
pyrimidine (C or T) - Strands held together by hydrogen bonds between
nucleotides - Chemical structures of nucleotides discourage
"incorrect" pairing - G-C pair has 3 hydrogen bonds, A-T only
2--former is stronger
4DNA Replication
- Semiconservative--replication results in two
strands, one original and one new - Sequence of events
- Helix unwinds
- Both strands replicate simultaneously, during
unwinding process
Raven et al. (1992)
5DNA Replication
- Sequence of events (cont.)
- "Leading" strand replicates continuously from 3'
end - newest end of forming strand oriented toward
replication fork - "Lagging" strand replicates by a series of
fragments placed end-to-end, facing away from
fork fragments with newest ends of fragments
later "ligated" - 2 polymerases "proofread" for mismatched bases
6Physical Structure of Genes
- Segments of chromatin that yield proteins through
transcription, translation - Typically separated by stretches of inactive
chromatin (intergenic spacers) - Commonly encompasses short stretches of inactive
chromatin that get cut out during translation
(introns) - Can experience recombination in whole or in part!
(contrary to original theories)
7Physical Structure of Genes
- Fundamental components
- Promoter region "upstream" of initiation site
- Necessary binding site for RNA polymerase to
accomplish translation - Bears recognition sequences for enzyme (e.g.,
TTTA) - Initiation site for transcription--yields
ribosomal binding site in mRNA
Suzuki et al. (1989)
8Gene Structure and Function
- Fundamental components (cont.)
- Coding region (exon) of structural gene
- Composed of codons (triplets) of nucleotides
- Begins with start codon (e.g., TAA)
- Ends with stop codon
- Codons complementary to mRNA codons
- -- amino acids in ultimate protein chain
- Termination region--halts polymerase from
transcribing
9Transcription
- Transcription from DNA strand in nucleus
- Takes place in three areas of DNA strand
- One site codes for large small subunits of rRNA
- Second site downstream codes for tRNAs
- Third site further downstream codes for proteins
- Nucleotides assembled parallel to DNA
- Complementary nucleotides used AU, CG
Suzuki et al. (1989)
10Post-transcriptional Processes
- Processing of primary RNA transcript from
protein-coding DNA - 5' cap and 3' poly-A tail stuck on
- introns spliced out in several stages, bringing
exons into proximity - Processing in different organs eliminates
different portions of transcript - -- different mRNA products from initial
transcript
Suzuki et al. (1989)
11Post-transcriptional Processes
- rRNA and tRNAs move into cytoplasm through
nuclear pores immediately - Mature mRNA moves into cytoplasm after processing
completed - Genes of mature mRNA translated to proteins
- Ribosomal subunits attach to mRNA (usually
several at different points) - tRNAs bring amino acids corresponding to mRNA
codons into proximity of ribosomal complex - Amino acids joined by peptide bonds to form
protein chain - No "proofreading" functions by RNA polymerases
12Post-transcriptional Processes
- MicroRNAs (miRNAs)newly discovered, very small
RNAs that bind to trancripts and render them
non-functional (Griffiths et al. 2008) - play potentially huge role in accomplishing
heterochronic (time-shifting) or tissue-specific
gene expression - Hundreds of loci found in typical genomes, appear
to be produced from junk DNA regions - miRNA abundance and diversity influenced by
environmental conditions - Heritable in the next generationhence
Lamarckian in behavior!
13The Genetic Code
- Degeneracy of the code
- 4 nucleotides, organized into triplets, yield 64
possible combinations - 20 commonly employed amino acids
- Multiple "synonymous" codons for many amino acids
Raven et al. (1992)
14The Genetic Code
- Codon-anticodon pairing
- Third position "wobble"--sloppy pairing for last
nucleotide in codon - mRNA codons with G or U in third position will
recognize and accept more than one tRNA anticodon
15Regulatory Genes
- Determine or influence timing, placement or
extent of structural gene (enzyme-producing gene)
action - Regulation most common at the transcriptional
level - Effects most far-reaching (especially
morphologically) of all possible regulatory types - Results from "switching" on and off of gene
transcription for particular genes - Simple systemencompasses some but not all
genetic systems
16Regulatory Genes
- "Multiple" systemsmay represent multiple genes,
promoters, regulators or combos of these - Originate from duplications, can diverge later
Langridge (1991)
17Enzyme Architecture
Computer-simulated folding of rubisco
- Primary--linear sequence of amino acids
- Secondary--side-group interactions
- alpha-helix
- beta-pleated sheet
Kellogg Juliano (1997)
18Enzyme Architecture
- Tertiary--folding of secondary components
- Quaternary--multimeric associations among
tertiary elements - Protein structure at any or all levels can impact
or determine enzymatic function
19Enzymatic Pathways
- One gene-one enzyme hypothesis
- One gene controls production of a single enzyme
- A biochemical reaction is catalyzed by one enzyme
- Processes occur as a series of catalyzed
reactions each ultimately regulated by a
different gene
Suzuki et al. (1989)
20Enzymatic Pathways
- Metabolic cycles
- e.g., photosynthesis
- e.g., flavonoids
- Usually slow to evolve
- Would have been important early on in evolution
of land plants - Increased complexity, integration--now largely
regulatory adjustments, at least among closely
related species
21Enzymatic Pathways
- Development/morphology
- e.g., pollination mechanisms in orchids
- May evolve very rapidly
- Slight changes by many different genes yield
major cumulative changes--new adaptive complexes
in a radiating lineage - Slight individual (developmental) modifications
to morphology accompanied by biochemical
adjustments
22Regulatory vs. Structural Genetic Change
- Example 1--Studies of duplicate gene expression
in catastomid fishes - Family originated from polyploidy ca. 50 million
years ago - 15 species now extant
- Half of duplicated genes in polyploids have lost
expression
23Regulatory vs. Structural Genetic Change
- Example 1--Studies of duplicate gene expression
in catastomid fishes (cont.) - Remainder have altered in expression in 60 of
tissues studied - Most changes in duplicate gene expression relate
to different organ and tissue locations, not to
cell type or developmental stage - Only 12/84 divergent tissue expressions traceable
to enzyme-coding gene mutations - Most tissue-characteristic enzyme patterns have
therefore resulted from mutations in
transcriptional or processing stages of
RNA?regulatory elements
24Regulatory vs. Structural Genetic Change
- Example 2--Surveys of tryptophan biosynthetic
pathways in protists and fungi - Regulation mechanisms are at least as easily
modified as gene locations (chromosome
structural changes) - Much more readily altered than primary structure
of active enzymes?more evidence of rapid changes
in regulatory mechanism
25Regulatory vs. Structural Genetic Change
- Example 3--Hybrids between morphologically very
similar taxa of fish - Express ontogenetic disturbances, e.g., increases
in morphological abnormalities, lethality - Species very closely related, probably only
recently diverged (not sufficient time for
extensive genetic differentiation of structural
genes - Species divergence must be in the molecular
regulation of genes underlying morphological
traits
26Organization of Genetic Material
- Hierarchical arrangement
- DNA strands paired in a double helix
- Chromatin "beads on a string"--double helix wound
helically around 8-part histone molecule, as
chain of "nucleosomes" - Nucleosomes packed into a tight "solenoid"
("supercoiling") - Packed stretches of nucleosomes for part of
condensed chromosomes
Raven et al. (1992)
27Organization of Genetic Material
- Multiple-copy DNA
- Dispersed repetitive DNA
- Scattered throughout genome
- Minisatellites--complicated motifs,
dozens/hundreds of bp long - Microsatellites--simple repeat motifs, usually
- Considered "junk" DNAbut may accidentally become
involved in transcription through accidents of
replication - Gene families
- Copies in different locations, i.e., on different
chromosomes - e.g., ribosomal genes, histone genes
- concerted evolution in some families
homogenizes sequence across all locibut is
random in direction, can proceed with different
templates across populations
28Mendelian Principles
- Alleles--different phenotypic expressions of the
same genetic trait - Dominance relationships
- Complete dominance
- Dominant allele--expresses phenotype if only one
copy is present - Recessive allele--only expresses phenotype if
both copies are present
Raven et al. (1992)
29Mendelian Principles
- Other dominance relationships
- Incomplete dominance--intermediate phenotype in
heterozygote - Codominance--both phenotypes expressed in
heterozygote (e.g., blood types LmLm, LnLn and
LmLn)
30Mendelian Principles
- Allelic systems
- Classical 2-alleletraditional model
- Multiple allelic series
- Documented for many genes, often with non-simple
relationships - e.g., chevron leaf pattern of white clover
- e.g., incompatibility systems enforcing
outcrossing
31Mendelian Principles
- Genotypes
- Homozygote--both alleles are the same
- Homozygous dominant (AA)expresses phenotype
coded by the dominant allele - Homozygous recessive (aa)expresses phenotype
coded by the recessive allele - Heterozygote--alleles are different (Aa)
expresses phenotype of dominant allele if
dominance relationship is dominant type, but
something intermediate or divergent where
relationship is incomplete or codominant
32Mendelian Principles
- Mendel's laws
- Law of Segregation
- Members of a gene pair segregate into separate
gametes - One-half of the gametes has one member, the other
half, the other - Law of Independent assortment--during gamete
formation, segregation in each gene pair is
independent of other pairs
Suzuki et al. (1989) Raven et al. (1992)
33Other Genetic Effects
- Lethal genes
- Death in recessive homozygote harboring lethal
alleles - Sometimes skews progeny ratios where
heterozygotes are "subvital" - Pleiotropy--one allele affects two or more
characters, e.g., coat color and survival in
yellow mice - Epistasis--phenotypic expression of one gene
dependent on expression of another gene - Suppressor genes
- Modifier genes
- Duplicate genes
- NOTEmany of these are non-Mendelian or even
non-Darwinian in inheritance!
34Mitotic and Meiotic Products
- Mitosis
- Occurs in somatic cells
- Yields two daughter cells from one
- Daughters diploid, same as parent
- Daughters typically genotypically identical to
each other and to parent - Usually disregarded in terms of heritable
variation (but consider somatic mutations
affecting flower primordia)
Mitosis
Meiosis
Raven et al. (1992)
35Mitotic and Meiotic Products
- Meiosis
- Occurs in generative cells ("sex cells")
- Yields, ultimately, four daughter cells from one
- Daughters haploid, reduced from diploid parent
(meiocyte) - Daughters typically genotypically different from
each other and from parent - Primary point where mutations are incorporated as
heritable variation
36Crossing-over
- Commonly accompanies meiosis, at the
"four-strand" stage - Occurs usually between any two nonsister
chromatids - Begins with intertwining of homologous
chromosomes ("chiasmata")
Suzuki et al. (1989)
37Crossing-over
- Intertwined strands break at chiasmata and
reunite, with exchange of chromosome parts - Typically crossing-over is equal--same-sized
fragments broken at same point and swapped,
yielding structurally identical chromatids - 50 or fewer progeny are recombinant
- Generates huge numbers of new recombinant
genotypes, at each sexual reproductive cycle, in
each individual, in each population, across the
species!
38Crossing-over
- Multiple crossing-over events
- Double crossing-over between adjacent sister
chromatids yields double recombinants - Crossing-over also takes place among non-adjacent
chromatids - Interference
- In some areas of chromosomes double crossing-over
never occurs - Suggests non-independence of crossing-over in
some regions
39Bibliography
- Griffiths, A. J. F., S. R. Wessler, R. C.
Lewontin, and S. B. Carroll. 2008. Introduction
to genetic analysis, 9th ed. W. H. Freeman and
Company, New York, New York. 838 pp. - Kellogg, E. A. and N. D. Juliano. 1997. The
structure and function of RuBisCO and their
implications for systematic studies. American
Journal of Botany 84413-428. - Langridge, J. 1991. Molecular genetics and
comparative evolution. John Wiley Sons, Inc.,
New York, New York. 216 pp.
40Bibliography
- Raven, P. H., R. F. Evert, and S. E. Eichhorn.
1992. Biology of plants, 5th ed. Worth
Publishers, New York, New York. 791 pp. - Suzuki, D. T., A. J. F. Griffiths, J. H. Miller,
and R. C. Lewontin. 1989. An introduction to
genetic analysis, 4th ed. W. H. Freeman and
Company, New York, New York. 768 pp.