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Weak forces in Evolution

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Title: Weak forces in Evolution


1
Weak forces in Evolution
  • Dan Graur

2
Changes in allele frequencies are
important. Changes in genotype frequencies are
not so important.
1.
2.
3
Mating
4
Deviation from randomness By genetic
similarity Assortative mating Disassortative
mating By genetic relatedness Inbreeding Out
breeding
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Skin color
6
disassortative
assortative
7
Assortative mating is very strong in humans even
with respect to non-genetic traits.
8
Degrees of inbreeding found in nature
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Cousins are preferred mates in many human
cultures.
11
P Ptolemy C Cleopatra
Inbreeding is usually bad
P ix
P xii
C v
C vii
an exception?
12
The fish Rivulus marmoratus exhibits the most
extreme form of inbreeding Selfing
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Random mating ? equilibrium allele frequencies
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Assortative mating ? excess homozygotes
15
Disassortative mating ? excess heterozygotes
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Even if extreme deviations from random mating
occur in all generations, allele frequencies
remain constant.
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Mating pattern is not an important
evolutionary force
18
Clinical effects of inbreeding
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Clinical effects of inbreeding
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Migration
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Migration will cause changes in the allele
frequencies of each of the two subpopulations.
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However, because of gene flow, the two
subpopulations are, in fact, one population, in
which allele frequencies do no change.
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Genotype frequencies will change in a similar
fashion to that in disassortative mating.
26
Migration is not an important evolutionary
force
27
Mutation
Mutation A transmissible change in the genetic
material
28
Mutations are the ultimate source of variation.
Only mutations can create genetic novelty.
29
Mutations arise all the time. Per definition, the
initial frequency of a mutation in a diploid
population is 1/2N.
N population size
30
The human population on Jan 19, 2009 was
estimated to be 6.7 billion people. The number of
alleles at an autosomal locus is, therefore, 13.4
billion. A mutation arising today in the human
population will have an approximate initial
frequency of 7 10-11.
31
The human population on Jan 19, 2009 was
estimated to be 6.7 billion people. The number of
alleles at an autosomal locus is, therefore, 13.4
billion. A mutation arising today in the human
population will have an approximate initial
frequency of 7 10-11
resulting in a change in allele frequencies from
0 to 7 10-11.
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33
Mutation is the ultimate source of variability,
but it is not an important evolutionary force.
34
For a mutation to become significant, it must
increase its frequency, so that it becomes fixed
in the population.
frequency of allele 1.0
35
Two factors can lead to the fixation of a new
mutation Selection Random genetic drift
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