Test 1 Flashcards

0
Q

Assumptions of HWE

A
  • no selection
  • no genetic drift ( infinitely large Pop size)
  • no mutation
  • no migration
  • random mating (no sexual selection)
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1
Q

How to calculate allele frequencies (not from hardy Weinberg)

A

p = (2NAA + NAG) / 2Ntotal

p = f(AA) + .5f(AG)

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2
Q

Evolutionary mechanisms

A
  • selection
  • finite population (genetic drift)
  • mutation
  • migration
  • non-random mating
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3
Q

Hardy Weinberg equilibrium

A

p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

p+q=1

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4
Q

Cline

A

A gradual change in character or allele frequency over a geographic distance

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5
Q

Fitness

A

Ability to survive and reproduce in a particular environment

Alleles with higher fitness in a given environment will become more common over time (fixation)

Max is 1

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6
Q

Rate to reach fixation depends on …

A
  • selection strength
  • whether the Allele is dominant or recessive
  • frequency
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7
Q
Homozygote advantage (genotype)
Phenotype ?
Fitness direction ?
Genetic variation ?
Example?
A

Waa = 1

Directional selection
Fitness goes up
Genetic variation goes down
Example is Dawson’s flies, Enders guppies

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8
Q

Heterozygote Adv
Phenotype?
Genetic variation?
Example?

A

WAa = 1

Stabilizing selection
Fitness increases
Genetic variation stays the same
Eg sickle cell anemia, births weight

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9
Q
Heterozygous disadvantage
Phenotype 
Fitness 
Genetic variation 
Example
A

WAa<1

Diversifying/disruptive selection
Fitness increases
Genetic variation decreases in a given pop, stays the same across different pops
Eg. Birds with diff sized beaks that depend on diet

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10
Q

Negative frequency dependent selection ; fitness change, genetic variation?

A

(Is a phenotype; less common more fit, more common less fit)
Fitness goes up
Genetic variation stays the same
(Batesian mimicry, no poisonous butterfly mimics pattern of poisonous one)

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11
Q

positive frequency dependent selection

A

More common more fit, less common less fit
(Mullerian mimicry - butterflies that are poisonous look alike)
Fitness increases
Genetic variation goes down in a given pop, same across pop

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12
Q

Founder effect

A

Form of genetic drift in which a change in allele frequency after a population is founded by a few individuals

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13
Q

Population bottleneck (effect)

A

Form of genetic drift in which there is a change in allele frequency due to loss of population (usually a freak event)

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14
Q

Sources of genetic variation in bacteria

A

ONLY mutation (NOT recombination)

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15
Q

Is selection stronger in large or small populations?

A

Large (in smaller sometimes it can go to loss)

16
Q

Mutation/Selection Balance

A

An equilibrium at which rate of addition of deleterious allele by mutation is balanced by the rate of removal by natural selection

17
Q

Is migration (gene flow) stronger in large or small populations?

A

Small populations (One-Island model)

19
Q

Advantages and disadvantages of inbreeding

A

advantages: ecological, genetic
disadvantages: inbreeding depression, increase frequency of homozygotes (likely to be deleterious)

does NOT change allele frequencies
measured by F (inbreeding coefficient, min is 0 (no inbreeding) max is 1)