Title: Hardy-Weinberg:
1Hardy-Weinberg
2Hardy-Weinberg Theorem
- Allele frequencies stay constant if there is no
selection and it's other assumptions are met - Heterozygosity will also stay the same
3Starts and end the same
4Figure 6-7a
5Calculating HW
6Two allele equation
- p2 2pq q2 1
- p frequency of allele A
- q Frequency of allele a
- p q 1.
- So p2 AA, q2 aa, and pq Aa
7Sophisticated Punnet square
8Genotype frequencyAlso Constant
9Calculating Genotype Frequencies Product Rule
10Assumptions
- Random mating
- Very large Population size
- Diploid
- Sexual
- Non-overlapping generations
- No migration
- No mutation
- No selection.
11Figure 6-11
12So what good is it?
- Provides an evolutionary baseline
- Calculate deviations from the H.W. Ideal
13More than 2 alleles
- Allele Frequencies
- P1 P2 P3 1
- Genotype Frequencies
- P12 P22 P32 2P1P2 2P1P3 2P2P3
14Hardy-Weinberg and Selection
15No Selection
16Add Selection
17Selection Over Time
18Empirical Research Alcohol Dehydrogenase
19Selection Can Change Genotype Frequency
20When is Selection Not Enough?
- Recessive Alleles
- HIV resistance
- CCR5 vs CCR5-?32
- ?32/?32 Homozygote confers resistance
- Should be sweeping towards fixationright?
- Its a good allele
21Setting The Stage
- So lets assume the highest frequency
- 20 in Ashkenazi Jews
- Assume highest infection rate
- 25 in Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Namibia, Botswana
22Figure 6-17a
23But are these assumptions reasonable?
24Europe
- 20 ?32 Reasonable
- But HIV infection rate less than 1
25Figure 6-17b
26Parts of Africa
- Infection rate up to 25
- But ?32 is almost absent
27Figure 6-17c
28Why doesnt selection work?
- Selection pressure is strong
- There are a few copies of ?32
29Patterns of Selection
30Recessive Lethal in Flour Beetles
31Decreased lethal alleles over time
32But Why arent they eliminated?
33Two Phenotypes
- D. melanogaster
- Lethal recesive
34Why did frequency of viable allele stabilize?
35Overdominance/Heterozygote advantage
- Results in stable equilibrium
36Underdominance/Homozygote advantage
- Results in unstable equilibrium
- Equilibrium depends on selection pressure
37Figure 6-23f
38Figure 6-23g
39Frequency Dependent Selection
- Fitness depends on frequency in population
40Figure 6-24a
- Purple or Yellow
- Dont provide nectar
- Bees alternate color
- Looking for reward
- Eventually leave
- Rare color visited more often
- Since bees alternate
- How did frequency affect fitness?
41Figure 6-24b
42Figure 6-24c
43Types of selection
44American Eugenics Movement
- Social Darwinism
- Starting in the late 1800s
- Big after WWI
- Immigration
- Obvious inequalities
- All of societies ills were genetic
- And could be eliminated
- 1911 list of ways to eliminate bad genes
- 8 was euthanasia.
45Implementation in the US
- Immigration law
- Ethnicity set quotas
- Forced Sterilization
- Feeblemindedness
- Amoral behavior
- Folks institutionalized for many reasons
- Rape
- Child of previous marriage
- Real physical/mental disability
46But Could it even work?
- Assumed Feeblemindedness was recessive
- Assumed 1-2 frequency
- Outcome of selection?
47Slow
48R.A. Fisher
- Said anti-eugenics propaganda
- Drop from 100/10,000 to 82.6/10,000 would reduce
public expenditure and personal misery
49And of course their genetics were all wrong
- Environment
- Multiple genes
- Many institutionalized for other reasons
- Genetics of morality?
50Where did this lead?
51Hitler
- 1924 Mein Kampf
- Quoted American egenicists
- He praised our immigration laws
- Also noted forced sterilization laws
- Start of Third Reich
- Praise by American eugenics movement
- By 1934 gt 5000 sterilized per month
- Eventually moved to solution 8.
52Only after WWII did America Move Away From
Eugenics
- Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
wrote, It is better for all the world, if
instead of waiting to execute degenerate
offspring for crime, or to let them starve for
their imbecility, society can prevent those who
are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind .
. . Three generations of imbeciles are enough.
1927
53Mutation and Hardy Weinberg
- Assume p has a frequency of 1
- What is the frequency of q ?
- Now allow a mutation to occur from p to q
- Instant evolution!
54Mutation rate of 1/10,000 (Very High)
55Overall affect?
56Over Time?
57So why does in matter?
- Raw material for evolution
- Creates new genes
- Mutation selection balance
58- Inbreed Stocks to make clones
- 30 generations stressed or unstressed
- Raise on 5 salt
- Where did ability to live on salt come from?
- Why did it increase?
59Mutation Selection Balance
- Rate of production of deleterious alleles offset
by selection - Has some equilibrium point
- q vµ/s
60Spinal Muscular Atrophy
- 0.01 frequency in Europeans
- Recessive
- Selection coefficient 0.9
- Would require 0.9 x 10-4 mutation rate
- Actual rate 1.1 x 10-4
- It works
61Cystic Fibrosis
- Opens respiratory system to Psedomonas aeruginosa
- Historically death pre-reproductive
- Recessive
- 0.02 frequency among europeans
- Assume selection coefficient of 1
- Requires mutation rate of 4 x 10-4
- Actual rate 6.7 x 10-7
- Way too low!
62Explanations?
- Possibly heterozygote advantage?
- Resistance to diarrheal diseases like typhoid
- Protects intestine
63Figure 6-31a
64Correlation with typhoid fever outbreaks
65But why so common in Northern Europe?
- Diversity of alleles higher elsewhere
- Selective advantage occurs elsewhere
- Other evolutionary forces.
66Genetic Engineering and Malaria
- Protect mosquitos from malaria
- Why?
- The genes exist
- But is it enough to have a mosquito with the gene?
67Have to increase frequency Link to a gene that
will increase in frequency
68Offspring from a cross
- But how does this increase frequency???
69Selfish genes
70Frequency of Medea with Time