Topic 5 - Mutations and Genetic Variation Flashcards

1
Q

What must occur if there is to be some form of evolution occurring (genetic basis)?

A
  • the traits must be heritable to some genetic basis
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2
Q

What is the challenges with genetic and environmental variation? two examples of this?

A
  • genetic and environmental changes can look very similar
  • Snow Goose (genetic variation)
  • Willow Ptarmigan (environmental variation)
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3
Q

Explain what drives the variation of the snow goose and willow ptarmigan.

A
  • these are not examples of genetic differences, rather a genetic difference driven by changing environmental conditions.
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4
Q

What are two examples which could resemble Lamarck’s idea, what is his idea again?

A
  • the idea of inheritance of acquired traits
    1. Peach Aphid: effect of the physical environment determines if it has wings or not
    2. Desert locus: epigentic inheritances (based on the maternal genotype) - crowded vs isolated conditions
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5
Q

What would explain evolution occurring but no phenotypic traits appearing?

A
  • there may be substantial amounts of unexpressed genetic variation occurring -these differences could evolve
  • this genetic variation is not always observed through the phenotype
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6
Q

What are the three explanations for observing phenotypic variation?

A
  1. genetic difference
  2. environmental difference
  3. combination of genetic and environmental interactions
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7
Q

Explain how genetic differences can explain when phenotypic variation occurs?

A
  • there could be one or many gene variations occurring

- this could be a result of epigenetic effects (expression of a gene varied by parental origin)

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8
Q

Explain what effect environmental differences can have for phenotypic variation, and what is this typically called?

A

the result of the same genotype presenting different phenotypes in changing environments

  • aka phenotypic plasticity
  • changes through environmental stimuli and conditions
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9
Q

How do genetoype and environmental interactions affect phenotypic variation?

A
  • the environmental affect varies with the genotype
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10
Q

Individuals in populations will show high levels of genetic variation, how is this variation maintained?

A
  • this maintenance of variation is driven by Natural Selection selecting for the best genotype in the populations
  • if the environmental factor is continuously changing, then these variants would not have been eliminated yet
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11
Q

What is the origin of genetic variation, and give two examples of it.

A
  • mutations is the basis for evolutionary change (essential in changing genetic material)
    1. Point mutations (base substitutions)
    2. Structural mutations (deletions, insertions, or chromosomal rearrangement)
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12
Q

Review: what two components do organismal genomes include?

A
  • genes (functional DNA which transcribe and translate for a structural product)
  • noncoding DNA (which do not contribute to final gene products and do not appear to have a function yet)
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13
Q

Of the two origins of genetic variation, explain point mutations.

A
  • aka single base-pair substitutions where one nucleotide base replaces another
  • they may occur in coding regions where they affect amino acid sequences
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14
Q

Of the two origins of genetic variation, explain structural mutations, and as a result of them occurring what further mutation may occur?

A
  • these include indels: gains or losses of nucleotide bases
  • these may be short or long
  • result in frameshift where the entire coding region of a whole gene is affected
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15
Q

Define microstatellites and their function.

A
  • short (few bases) of repeating DNA sequences

- abundant in eukaryotes, highly variable and may lead to chromosomes to getting longer when the DNA sequences align.

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16
Q

What occurred between microsatellites and the fairy-wren?

A
  • mutation changes (in terms of the number of repeats) occurred between the parents and their offspring
17
Q

How do structural mutations occur? DNA rearrangement (3)

A
  • through recombination during meiosis (intragenic recombination)
  • when something goes wrong during the crossing-over which leads to new alleles of a gene region
  • or their could be UNEQUAL crossing-over during recombination (of meiosis) which leads to either INSERTIONS or DELETIONS
18
Q

What is meant by the statement: structural mutations can be both small scale and large scale?

A
  • these mutations are a consequence of unequal crossing-over during meiosis
  • mispairings when chromosomes swap leads to whole gains or loses of a whole gene
19
Q

How would one observe a mutation? in the old days compared to the present? what effect does this phenotypic mutations have?

A
  • before molecular methods, to detect mutations one would have to observe it phenotypically
  • challenge is though some phenotypic mutations maybe minimally invasive
  • phenotypic mutations occur they can affect fitness, however most are neutral
20
Q

What occurs when a mutation affects the fitness of an organism?

A
  • this may be deleterious
21
Q

What are some limitations of these mutations? new traits?

A
  • mutations occur as RANDOM events
  • organisms cannot produce advantageous mutations in response to an environment
  • for a new trait to evolve, a mutation must first produce it
22
Q

What occurred in the Joshua and Esther Lederberg experiment?

A
  • this was a replicate plate experiment which showed how a mutation in an E. coli from a T1 phage was present prior to any exposure to a virus - an advantageous mutation occurred without exposure to an environment where this mutation would be advantageous
23
Q

Define chromosomal mutations, and give two examples of what could occur.

A
  • Aneuploidy: a gain or loss of ONE chromosome
  • Polyploidy: gain of entire chromosome sets - causing a rearrangement
  • these result in eukaryotic organisms: where there is a GAIN, LOSS or REARRANGEMENT of entire chromsomes
24
Q

Explain where polyploidy would occur for eukaryotes?

A
  • polyploidy (common in plants) would occur during either mitosis or meiosis, specifically if the division of the cytoplasm is out of sync with the replication of DNA
25
Q

What can polyploidy result from?

A
  • the production of unreduced (diploid) games during meiosis

- failure of cytoplasmic division during mitosis

26
Q

Explain how a triploid may result from abnormal chromosome behaviour at meiosis.

A
  • when a trios of homologous chromosomes undergo synapsis and unequal numbers separate
  • leading to aneuplod gametes
27
Q

What affect do chromosomal mutations have on the order of genes?

A
  • may change the order or number of genes on a chromosome
28
Q

Explain how an Autotetraploid may result from abnormal chromosome behaviour at meiosis.

A
  • when a quartet of chromosomes undergo synapsis but DO NOT separate as two and two, rater three and one
  • leading to aneuplod gametes
  • will have reduced fertility
29
Q

Explain how an Allotetraploid may result from abnormal chromosome behaviour at meiosis.

A
  • each chromosome pairs with a single homologue from some parental species, with normal segregation
  • normal fertility results with viable gametes
30
Q

What are three types of chromosomal rearrangements that can occur?

A
  • inversion, translocations, and fissions/fusions
  • this occurs when chromosomes break and rejoin in new configurations, but this may change gene order and chromosome structure itself
31
Q

What consequences arise from chromosome inversions?

A
  • this occurs when a normal and inverted gene leads to gene duplication and losses
  • hybrid progeny will not form viable gametes, fertility is reduced being a reproductive barrier
32
Q

What consequences arise from reciprocal translocations?

A
  • this occurs when 2 non homologous chromosomes give rise to a translocation heterozygote, where this heterozygote undergoes meiosis and he products having incomplete gene complements
33
Q

Explain what is so different between the two species of muntjac deer.

A
  • is the case of related species differing in karyotype (visual number of chromosomes)
  • they are genetically different but phenotypically different
  • this means that chromosomal evolution occurred NOT gene evolution
34
Q

What is non genetic inheritance?

A
  • epigenetic inheritance is heritable but is NOT caused by changes in DNA sequence
35
Q

How are epigenetic inheritance mediated? do paternal genotype affect inheritance in this case?

A
  • through mechanisms such as DNA methylation - preventing expression of a gene being expressed
  • maternal effect results where the parents genotype rather than the genotype of the affected individual on which genes were expressed
36
Q

What is an example where the maternal genotype effects the inheritance of the progeny

A
  • the snails coiling direction of the shell is dependent on the individuals mother.