Title: Introduction to Population Genetics
1Introduction to Population Genetics
- Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
2Darwin and Evolution
- Descent with modification
- Change over time 4 conditions that lead to
evolution
- There are differences among individuals within
populations
- differences are passed from parent offspring
- more offspring are born than will survive and
reproduce.
- Some variants are more successful at surviving
and/or reproducing than others
- If all 4 met Population is evolving.
3- Population genetics incorporates Mendelian
Genetics into the study of Evolution
- The goal of population genetics is to understand
the genetic composition of a population and the
forces that determine and change that
composition - Microevolution a change in the genetic
composition of a population
4So what exactly is a population?
- A population a group of interbreeding
individuals of the same species living within a
prescribed geographical area
- A Gene Pool the complete set of genetic
information contained within all the individuals
in a population
5Describing the genetic composition of a population
- Genotypic frequencies the proportion of
individuals in a population with a given
genotype
- Example Gene A with two alleles, A and a
6Genotypic frequencies
Frequency (AA) 2/10 0.2 20
Frequency (Aa) 5/10 0.5 50
Frequency (aa) 3/10 0.3 30
Note The total 1.0 or 100
7Describing the genetic composition of a population
- Allelic frequencies the proportion of alleles of
a particular gene locus in a gene pool that are
of a specific type
- Example Gene A with two alleles, A and a
8Allelic frequencies
Frequency (A) 9/20 0.45 45
Frequency (a) 11/20 0.55 55
Note The total 1.0 or 100
9Polymorphic Loci
A genetic locus is said to be polymorphic
if that locus has more than one allele occurring
at a frequency greater than 5 (for example if
for gene A, f(A) 0.06, f(a) 0.94
Most populations of insects and plants are
polymorphic at more than half of their enzyme-
encoding loci (vertebrates are somewhat less)
10Why do we have polymorphic loci?
Shouldnt dominant alleles replace
recessive ones? Shouldnt natural selection eli
minate
genetic variation?
11The Hardy-Weinberg Principle
- Allele frequencies and genotypic frequencies will
remain constant from generation to generation as
long as
- The population size is large
- Mating is random
- No mutation takes place
- There is no migration in or out of the
population
- There is no natural selection
- If these conditions are met, the population is
said to be in Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
12How does it work?-Allelic frequencies
- By convention, for a given gene the frequency of
the dominant allele is symbolized by p, the
frequency of the recessive allele is represented
by q - So for our previous example, p f(A) 0.45, q
f(a) 0.55
- If these are the only two alleles for the gene in
the population then
- p q 1.0
13How does it work? -Genotypic frequencies
Imagine a population in which p 0.2, q 0.8
The gene pool of this population
can be pictured as a container full
of gametes. The frequency of gametes carryin
g the A allele 0.2 The frequency of gametes
carrying the a allele 0.8
14How does it work? -Genotypic frequencies
Imagine a population in which p 0.2, q 0.8
To get a zygote/adult, we need to pull
out 2 gametes to unite them
genotype AA
Prob(A) x Prob(A)
p x p p2 0.2
x 0.2 0.04
15How does it work? -Genotypic frequencies
Imagine a population in which p 0.2, q 0.8
To get a zygote/adult, we need to pull
out 2 gametes to unite them
genotype aa
Prob(a) x Prob(a)
q x q q2 0.8
x 0.8 0.64
16How does it work? -Genotypic frequencies
Imagine a population in which p 0.2, q 0.8
To get a zygote/adult, we need to pull
out 2 gametes to unite them
genotype Aa
genotype Aa
2 x P(A) x P(a)
2 x p x q 2pq 2
x 0.2 x 0.8 0.32
17So
- For a population where p f(A) and q f(a)
- p q 1
- The frequency of the genotypes in H-W equilibrium
will be
- f(AA) p2
- f(Aa) 2pq
- f(aa) q2
- Since these are all the possible genotypes
- p2 2pq q2 1
18The next generation
Generation 1 f(AA) p2 f(Aa) 2pq f(aa)
q2
Generation 1s gametes
a
gametes will be produced in their original
frequencies, p and q
a
a
a
A
A
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
A
a
a
a
A
a
a
a
Generation 2 f(AA) p2 f(Aa) 2pq f(aa)
q2
19The Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
20Whats the point?
- Hardy-Weinberg tells us that if certain
conditions are met, there will be no change in
gene frequencies-- no evolution
- The population size is large
- Mating is random
- No mutation takes place
- There is no migration in or out of the
population
- There is no natural selection
- If one or more of these assumptions is violated,
gene frequencies will change -- evolution occurs
21Agents of evolutionary change
22Other consequences of H-W
- Genotypic/ phenotypic frequencies depend on
allele frequencies, not on which allele is
dominant or recessive
- Example Achondroplasia gene D dwarfism, d
normal height
- p f(D) 0.00005 q f(d) 0.99995
- Frequency of dwarfs p2 2pq 0.0001 (one in
ten thousand)
- For rare recessive alleles, most individuals with
the allele will be heterozygotes, and will not
express it
- ExampleCystic fibrosis C normal allele, c
cystic fibrosis
- p f(C) 0.978 q f(c) 0.022
- Freq. of cc individuals q2 0.00048 (1 in
2000)
- Freq.of Cc individuals 2pq 0.043
(almost 1 in 25)
23Lets work through some problems
- In a certain population, 28 individuals are
genotype aa, 42 are
- genotype Aa, and 30 are genotype AA.
- a. What are the genotypic frequencies in this
population?
- b. What are the allele frequencies in this
population?
- c. What genotypic frequencies would H-W predict
there should be
- given your answer to b.? Is this population in
H-W equilibrium?
24Lets work through some problems
- In a certain population, 28 individuals are
genotype aa, 42 are
- genotype Aa, and 30 are genotype AA.
- a. What are the genotypic frequencies in this
population?
- f(aa) 28/(284230) 28/100 0.28 f(Aa)
42/(284230) 42/100 0.42
- f(AA) 30/(284230) 30/100 0.30
- b. What are the allele frequencies in this
population?
- q f(a) ((28x2) 42))/(2x(284230)) 98/200
0.49
- p f(A) ((30x2) 42))/(2x(284230))
102/200 0.51
- c. What genotypic frequencies would H-W predict
there should be
- given your answer to b.? Is this population in
H-W equilibrium?
- According to H-W, genotypic frequencies should
be
- f(aa) q2 (0.49)2 0.24 f(Aa) 2pq 2
x 0.49 x 0.51 0.50
- f(AA) p2 (0.51)2 0.26
- So, no this population is not in H-W equilibrium
25Lets work through some problems
2. In a certain population, 1 in every 2500
babies born are albino (normal pigmentation (S)
is dominant over albinism (s)).
Assume this population is in H-W equilibrium for
this gene. What is the frequency of the albino
allele in this population? What is the freq
uency of heterozygotes in this population?
26Lets work through some problems
2. In a certain population, 1 in every 2500
babies born are albino (normal pigmentation (S)
is dominant over albinism (s)).
Assume this population is in H-W equilibrium for
this gene. What is the frequency of the albino
allele in this population? f(ss) q2 1/2500
0.0004 f(s) q square root (0.0004) 0.02
(so f(S) p 1 - q 0.98) What is the freq
uency of heterozygotes in this population?
f(Ss) 2pq 2 x 0.98 x 0.02 0.0392