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Molecular Clock: An Interesting Application

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Xuhua Xia. Slide 2. Objectives. Comprehend one of the two major components in molecular phylogenetics, dating speciation events. (What is the other component?) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Molecular Clock: An Interesting Application


1
Molecular Clock An Interesting Application
  • Xuhua Xia
  • xxia_at_uottawa.ca
  • http//dambe.bio.uottawa.ca

2
Objectives
  • Comprehend one of the two major components in
    molecular phylogenetics, dating speciation
    events. (What is the other component?)
  • Understand the concept of a molecular clock and
    its two meanings
  • as a measure of time (after calibration)
  • as a measure of the rate of change
  • Learn to calibrate the molecular clock and how to
    use it to solve practical biological problems

3
The Origin of Darwins Fox
Chiloé Island
Yahnke, C. J., W. E. Johnson, E. Geffen, D.
Smith, F. Hertel, M. S. Roy, C. F. Bonacic et al.
1996. Darwin's fox A distinct endangered species
in a vanishing habitat. Conservation Biology
10366-375.
4
Dusicyon fulvipes
In the evening we reached the island of S.
Pedro...two of the officers landed to take a
round of angles with the theodilite. A fox, of a
kind said to be peculiar to the island, and very
rare in it, and which is an undescribed species,
was sitting on the rocks. He was so intently
absorbed in watching their manoeuvres, that I was
able, by quietly walking up behind, to knock him
on the head with my geological hammer. This fox,
more curious or more scientific, but less wise,
than the generality of his brethren, is now
mounted in the museum of the Zoological
Society. --C. Darwin. 1839. Journal of researches
in the geology and natural history of the various
countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle, under the
command of Captain Fitzroy, R. N. from 1832-1836.
Henry Colburn, London. P. 341.
5
Conventional Hypothesis
  • Gray foxes on the mainland have frequently
    migrated to the island during the ice ages when
    the sea level was much lower than it is today
  • After the last glaciation period which ended
    about 15000 years ago, the sea level rose
    isolating the island from the mainland. The gray
    fox population on the island then evolved
    independently from that of the mainland and the
    two gradually diverge from each other.
  • The Darwins fox is the product of this isolated
    evolution of the ancestral gray fox on the Chiloé
    Island.
  • Prediction The genetic difference should be
    small and comparable to the divergence time of
    15000 years.

6
The Challenge to the Hypothesis
  • Differences between Darwins fox and gray fox
  • Morphological
  • Behavioral
  • A mainland population was found (Medel, R. G., J.
    E. Jimenez, F. M. Jaksic, J. L. Yanez, and J. J.
    Armesto. 1990. Discovery of a continental
    population of the rare Darwin's fox, Dusicyon
    fulvipes, new record (Martin, 1837) in Chile.
    Biological Conservation 5171-78.) Reproductive
    isolation
  • Ancient origin of Darwins fox?
  • Scientific significance the two criteria of
    species conservation.
  • Methodology molecular clock

7
Mechanical Clock
We can obtain the length of time by counting the
number of ticks. How does a molecular clock tick?
8
Factors Affecting DNA Evolution
  • Types of Mutation
  • Point mutation
  • Insertion
  • Deletion
  • Inversion
  • Duplication

ATG AAA CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
ATG AAA CCC CGA GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
ATG AAA CCC CGG AAA AAA GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
ATG AAA CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
ATG AAA CCC CGG CCC CGG TAT TTT TTG
ATG AAA CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTT TTT TTG
9
How Does a Molecular Clock Tick?
ATGACCCCGACACGCAAAATTAACCCACTAATAAAATTAATTAATCACTC
ATTTATCGAC
ATGACCCCGACACGCAAAATTAACCCACTAATAAAGTTAATTAATCACT
CATTTATCGAC
ATGACCTCGACACGCAAAATTAACCCACTAATAAAGTTAATTAATCACT
CATTTATCGAC
ATGACCTCGACACGCAAAATGAACCCACTAATAAAGTTAATTAATCACT
CATTTATCGAC
ATGACCTCGACACGCAAAATGAACCCACTAATAAAGTTAATTAATCACT
CATTTATCGAC
Each nucleotide substitution is equivalent to one
tick in a mechanical clock. The more nucleotide
substitutions, the longer the time is.
10
A Major Difference
  • The Molecular clock is an irregular (or even
    sporadic) clock.
  • However, we could still say that, on average,
    this particular DNA clock, or that particular
    protein clock, ticks once every million years.
  • But how do we know when is the beginning of the
    time? We dont have the ancestral sequence
    available for comparison.

11
Divergence from a Common Ancestor
AAA CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
AAA CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
AAA CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTT
AAG CCC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
AAT CTC CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTT
AAG CCT CGG GGC CCC TAT TTT TTG
AAT CTC CGG GGC CTC TAT TTT TTT
AAG CCT CGG GGC CCT TAT TTT TTG
12
Sequence Divergence
Sp1 AAG CCT CGG GGC CCT TAT TTT TTG
Sp2 AAT CTC CGG GGC CTC
TAT TTT TTT
  • Sequence length 24
  • Identical pairs 18
  • Number of nucleotide differences per sited
    (24-18)/24 0.25 or d -ln(1-d) 0.288,
    called the Poisson-corrected P-distance, is a
    better estimate because it partially corrects for
    multiple hits (partially because it does not
    correct for substitutions such as A?G ?A)
  • How can we translate this 0.288 into divergence
    time, i.e., how many years have Species 1 and 2
    diverged from each other?

13
Sedimentary Rocks and Fossils
Sedimentary rocks form on top of older rocks,
with fossils buried inside.
If fossils of rats and mice are found in one
stratum, but not in any older strata, then, if
the stratum is found to be 15 million years old,
we can infer that mice and rats must have
diverged 15 millions years ago.
14
Calibration of the Molecular Clock I
The same calibration can be made with any genetic
distances (e.g., those calculated from DNA
hybridization or allelic frequencies)
15
Different ways of calibration II
0.45
0.4
0.35
0.3
0.25
Genetic Distance
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
0
0
2
4
6
8
10
90000 years
Divergence Time (10000)
16
The Challenge to the Hypothesis
  • Mitochondrial DNA genes were sequenced from
    Darwins fox, the gray fox and other related
    foxes.
  • According a calibrated molecular clock, the
    divergence time is estimated to be 2 million
    years, which is much greater than the expected
    divergence time of 15000 years.

Darwins fox Mainland gray fox
2 myr
17
Conclusions
  • Darwins fox had diverged from the gray fox
    millions of years ago on the mainland, long
    before the Chiloé island was formed.
  • After the formation of Chiloé Island, some
    Darwins foxes, not gray foxes, migrated to the
    island and became established. Meanwhile, the
    mainland population had gone extinct.
  • Darwins fox is an independent species and its
    conservation is urgent (only about 500 left).

18
Divergence time
Island Darwins fox Mainland Darwins
fox Mainland gray fox
2 myr
Afternoon Lab Testing the validity of the
molecular hypothesis
19
Testing the Molecular Clock
  • Distance-based tests
  • Likelihood ratio tests
  • The tree-based test
  • The relative-rate test
  • Nucleotide-based analysis (Muse and Gaut 1992)
  • Codon-based analysis (Muse and Gaut 1994)

20
Relative-rate tests
Ingroup 1
?1 ?1
?3 ?3
Outgroup
?2 ?2
Ingroup 2
Constraint both ?1 ?2 ? , ?1 ?2 ? (2
parameters) General model ?1, ?2 , ?1 , ?2 (4
parameters) Constrain ? ?1 ?2 ? , ?1, ?2 (3
parameters) Constrain ? ?1, ?2 , ?1 ?2 ? (3
parameters) Likelihood ratio test ?2 2?lnL,
DF ?Parameter
21
Tree-based tests
x11
x10
x1
x7
x4
x2
x3
x9
x8
x5
x6
x1
x2
x3
x4
x6
x5
DF for LRT n - 2
22
Tree-based tests
d12 x1 x2 d13 x1 x4 x3 ... d67 x10
x11 RSSnc ?(dij dij)2 d12 2 x1 d13
2 (x1 x2) ... d67 2 ( x5 x6) RSSc
?(dij dij)2
Xia, X. 2009. Molecular Phylogenetics and
Evolution 52665-676
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