Selection Flashcards

1
Q

Darwin’s Finches

A

an example of adaptive radiation/divergent adaption, where the variation was already present in the ancestral population but environmental influences (such as diet) dictated fitness in different descendent populations

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2
Q

Natural Selection

A

process where some of the inherited genetic variation results in differences in individual’s ability to produce healthy offspring

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3
Q

fitness

A

measure of an individual’s ability o survive and reproduce successfully

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4
Q

Positive (Darwin) Selection

A

process where an advantageous mutation increases in a population

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5
Q

Negative (purifying) Selection

A

process where a not-so-good mutation is removed from the population

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6
Q

Does selection cause evolution?

A

NO - Selection only works on exisiting diversity. Evolution does not cause a new mutation to occur, but once it is there, then selection can act on it.

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7
Q

Most common mutation?

A

neutral (no effect)

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8
Q

Fixation

A

when the allele frequency = 1 –> 2 copies present in every member of the poulation

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9
Q

What happens when the allele frequency equals 0?

A

the trait is lost from the population

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10
Q

Least common mutation?

A

positive

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11
Q

What can affect the rate that a trait rises to fixation?

A

dependent on the level of fitness advantage, initial allele frequency, and population size

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12
Q

3 Examples of Traits with positive selection

A
  1. Better ability to find/use food
  2. Disease resistance
  3. Improved fertility
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13
Q

Convergent Adaptation

A

two separate populations develop the same variant independent of one another

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14
Q

Heterozygote Advantage

A

where the heterozygotes have a higher fitness, and selection favors the maintenance of both alleles in a population via overdominant selection

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15
Q

Examples of Heterozygote Advantage

A
  1. Cystic fibrosis (1 copy resistant to typhus)
  2. Sickle Cell anemia (1 copy resistant to malaria)
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16
Q

Overdominant Selection

A

used in heterozygote advantage - think Africa and malaria

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17
Q

Do populations subject to overdominant selection have a higher frequency of recessive disorders?

A

Yes (but often can be homozygous lethal anyway)

18
Q

How quickly are lethal mutations removed from the population?

A

Immediately. They’re dead, so

19
Q

Genetic Drift

A

changes in frequency of neutral variants

occurs by chance –> RANDOM, no selective pressure

20
Q

Can an allele reach fixation via genetic drift?

A

YES - bottlenecking, geographic isolation, stepping on a bug, and just time

21
Q

Are allele frequency changes more prominent in small or large populations?

A

small –> easy to eliminate an allele

22
Q

Genetic Drift vs. Selection

A

genetic drift is RANDOM

selection is NOT random and also directional in response to environmental pressures

23
Q

Artificial Selection

A

aka humans messing with things

can be done via phenotype or genotype, depending on availability and/or industry standards

24
Q

Pedigree Based Selection

A

Breed based on lineage, desirable traits should be passed down to offspring. Works well for simple traits but not anything more complex.

25
Q

Estimated Breeding Value (EBV)

A

quantification of the likelihood of an indivdual passing on the desired trait to their offspring

26
Q

Heritability (h^2)

A

proportion/percentage of a variation [of a trait] in the population due to genetic variation among individuals

(NOT percentage that is due to genetics)

27
Q

Heritability of a Mendelian trait?

A

1 (100%)

28
Q

Heritability of something caused entirely by environment?

A

0

29
Q

EBV Calculation for one trait

A

EBV = h^2(individual trait value minus the average trait value of the population)

30
Q

Index Merit/Score

A

Index = weighted sum of EBV for each objective trait (weight times EBV) added together

31
Q

Where do you get the weight for each trait?

A

importance of each trait to the producer/breeder/client

32
Q

Where do you get heritability?

A

many are published, but otherwise you have to make an educated guess

33
Q

Where do you get the individual’s trait value?

A

the owner or vet calulates it

34
Q

Correlated traits

A

selecting for one trait can often result in affecting another (can be desirable or undesirable)

ex: GSD and sloped back + hip dysplasia

35
Q

Indirect selection

A

improving one trait by intentionally selecting another trait known to correlate with it

36
Q

Inbreeding depression

A

a result of the increase of recessive diseases and generally associated with decreased performance

37
Q

Does inbreeding help with selection?

A

NO - inbreeding decreases genetic diversity, butselection can only act on the diversity that is present in a population

38
Q

Difference between marker-assisted selection (MAS) and GWAS?

A

just the number of markers - MAS selects for fewer quantitative trait loci (QTL), GWAS is the whole genome

39
Q

Marker Assisted Selection

A

uses genotypes of a set of markers/SNPs most strongly associated with one or a few QTL

40
Q

QTL (Quantitative Trait Loci)

A

GWAS done for a trait, looked at the regions of the genome associated with that trait, and selected a few markers/SNPs