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Chapter 11 Sex: causes and consequences

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Title: Hardy Weinberg Equiibrium with more than 2 alleles Author: Neil Buckley Last modified by: Neil Buckley Created Date: 9/30/1996 6:28:10 PM Document presentation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 11 Sex: causes and consequences


1
Chapter 11 Sex causes and consequences
  • Assigned Reading Chapter 11

2
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Many risks and costs associated with sexual
    reproduction.
  • Searching for and courting a mate requires time
    and energy and exposes organisms to predators
  • Sex exposes individuals to infection with
    diseases and and parasites.
  • Mate may require investment (food, territory,
    defense).
  • Sex can break up favorable combinations of genes.

3
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Why not reproduce asexually?
  • Many organisms can reproduce both sexually and
    asexually.
  • E.g. plants, aphids.

4
Adaptive significance of sex
  • In populations that can reproduce both asexually
    and sexually will one mode of reproduction
    replace the other?

5
Adaptive significance of sex
  • John Maynard Smith explored the question.
  • Considered population in which some organisms
    reproduce asexually and the others sexually.
  • Made 2 assumptions.

6
Maynard Smiths assumptions
  • 1. Mode of reproduction does not affect number
    of offspring she can produce.
  • 2. Mode of reproduction does not affect
    probability offspring will survive.
  • (asexually reproducing organisms produce only
    females, sexually reproducing produce both males
    and females.)

7
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Asexually reproducing females under Maynard
    Smiths assumptions leave twice as many
    grandchildren as sexually reproducing females.
  • This is because each generation of sexually
    reproducing organisms contains only 50 females.

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9
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Ultimately, asexual reproduction should take
    over.
  • However, in nature this is not the case.
  • Most organisms reproduce sexually and both sexual
    and asexual modes of reproduction are used in
    many organisms

10
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Sex must confer benefits that overcome the
    mathematical reproductive advantage of asexual
    reproduction.
  • One or both of Maynard Smiths assumptions must
    be incorrect.

11
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Assumption 1 (mode of reproduction does not
    affect number of offspring she can produce) is
    violated in species where males helps females
    (humans, birds, many mammals, some fish).
  • However, not likely a general explanation because
    in most species male does not help.

12
Adaptive significance of sex
  • Most likely advantage of sex is that it increases
    offsprings prospects of survival.

13
Sex in populations means genetic recombination
  • Sex involves
  • Meiosis with crossing over
  • Matings with random individuals
  • Random meeting of sperm and eggs
  • Consequence is genetic recombination. New
    combinations of genes brought together each
    generation.

14
Why is sex beneficial?
  • 1. Genetic drift plus mutation make sex
    beneficial. Escapes Mullers ratchet.
  • 2. Selection imposed by changing environments
    makes sex beneficial

15
Genetic drift plus mutation Mullers ratchet
  • An asexually reproducing female will pass a
    deleterious mutation to all her offspring.
  • Back mutation only way to eliminate it.
  • Mullers ratchet accumulation of deleterious
    alleles in asexually reproducing populations.

16
Mullers ratchet
  • Small, asexually reproducing population.
  • Deleterious mutations occur occasionally.
  • Mutations selected against.
  • Population contains groups of individuals with
    zero, one, two, etc. mutations.

17
Mullers ratchet
  • Few individuals in each group. If by chance no
    individual with zero mutations reproduces in a
    generation, then the zero mutation group is lost.
  • Rate of loss of groups by drift will be higher
    than rate of back mutation so population will
    over time accumulate deleterious mutations in a
    ratchet fashion.

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20
Mullers ratchet
  • Burden of increased number of deleterious
    mutations (genetic load) may eventually cause
    population to go extinct.
  • Sexual reproduction breaks ratchet. E.g. two
    individuals each with one copy of a deleterious
    mutation will produce 25 of offspring that are
    mutation free.

21
Anderson and Hughes (1996) test of Mullers
ratchet in bacteria.
  • Propagated multiple generations of bacterium, but
    each generation was derived from one individual
    (genetic drift).
  • 444 cultures. At end of experiment (2 months) 1
    of cultures had reduced fitness (lower than
    wild-type bacteria), none had increased fitness.
    Results consistent with Mullers ratchet.

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23
Selection favors sex in changing environments.
  • Effects of Mullers ratchet are slow and take
    many generations to affect asexually reproducing
    populations.
  • However, advantage of sex is apparent in only a
    few generations. What short-term benefit does sex
    provide?

24
Selection favors sex in changing environments.
  • In constant environments asexual reproduction is
    a good strategy (if mother is adapted to
    environment, offspring will be too).
  • However, if environment changes, offspring may be
    poorly adapted and all will be poorly adapted
    because they are identical.

25
Selection favors sex in changing environments.
  • Sexually reproducing females produce variable
    offspring so if the environment changes some may
    be well adapted to the new environment.

26
Selection favors sex in changing environments.
  • Red Queen Hypothesis evolutionary arms race
    between hosts and parasites.
  • (Red Queen runs to stand still)
  • Parasites and hosts are in a perpetual struggle.
    Host evolving defenses, parasite evolving ways to
    evade them.
  • Different multilocus host genotypes are favored
    each generation. Sex creates the genotypes.

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29
Do parasites favor sex in hosts?
  • Lively (1992) studied New Zealand freshwater
    snail. Host to parasitic trematodes.
  • Trematodes eat hosts gonads and castrate it!
    Strong selection pressure.
  • Snail populations contain both obligate sexually
    and asexually reproducing females.

30
Do parasites favor sex in hosts?
  • Proportion of sexual vs asexual females varies
    from population to population.
  • Frequency of trematode infections varies also.

31
Do parasites favor sex in hosts?
  • If evolutionary arms race favors sex, then
    sexually reproducing snails should be commoner in
    populations with high rates of trematode
    infections.
  • Results match prediction.

32
White slice indicates frequency of males and
thus sexual reproduction
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34
The Fisher-Muller Hypothesis
  • Another advantage of sex is that recombination
    allows natural selection to operate at a faster
    rate than in asexual populations.
  • Sex does this by bringing together combinations
    of beneficial alleles. Sexual reproduction can
    produce them faster than asexual reproduction
    can.

35
The Fisher-Muller Hypothesis
  • Consider two populations one that reproduces
    sexually and the other asexually.
  • Imagine that a beneficial mutation A arises in
    each population and increases in frequency.
  • Then imagine another beneficial mutation B occurs
    in each population.

36
The Fisher-Muller Hypothesis
  • In an asexually reproducing population the only
    way to produce an individual with the AB genotype
    is for a B mutation to occur in an individual who
    already possesses the A mutation.

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38
The Fisher-Muller Hypothesis
  • However, an individual with the genotype AB can
    easily be produced through sexual reproduction
    between an individual with the A mutation and one
    who possesses the B mutation.

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40
The Fisher-Muller Hypothesis
  • What sexual reproduction is doing is breaking
    down linkage disequilibrium and creating new
    haplotypes
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