Hardy Weinberg Flashcards

1
Q

what is hardy weinberg

A

mathematical representation of the relationship between genotype and allele frequencies in an ideal population

Covers an autosomal locus with two alleles:

Makes several key assumptions about the population

To deliver 2 key predictions about genotype and allele frequencies

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2
Q

the 5 assumptions

A

The population is infinitely large

Random mating occurs within the population

The population is free from the effects of migration

There is no natural selection

No mutations occur

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3
Q

predictions

A

When the assumptions are met:

  • The genotype and allele frequencies are constant
  • In the proportions p2, 2pq, q2 where p is the frequency of allele A and q is the frequency of allele a
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4
Q

after one generation of random mating

A
Given any set of initial genotype frequencies after one generation of random mating the genotype frequencies in the progeny are in the proportions:
-	p2, 2pq, q2
•	Where 
-	f(AA) = pxp = p2 
f(Aa) = pxq + pxq = 2pq 
f(aa) = qxq = q2 

These are the expected frequencies of genotypes under HWE giving the relationship
- p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

They will stay in these proportions generation after generation given random mating and the absence of factors that change allelic or genotype frequencies

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5
Q

when a population obeys HW law it is said to be in what

A

Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium

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6
Q

when a population is in HWE

A

genotypes frequencies can be predicted from allele frequencies

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7
Q

when is HW law true

A

in populations where all the assumptions are met

It may also be true/ approximately true in some populations where assumptions are not met

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8
Q

what does linkage describe

A

when alleles are not passed independently to the next generation

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9
Q

what does linkage violate

A

the law of independent assortment

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10
Q

when does linkage usually occur

A

with alleles that are physically close on the same chromosome

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11
Q

what does HWE describe

A

a state of independence between alleles at one locus

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12
Q

what does linkage equilibrium describe

A

a state of independence between alleles at different loci

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13
Q

what is linkage disequilibrium

A

the non-random association of alleles at different loci

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14
Q

linkage equilibrium/linkage disequilibrium

A

If there is no linkage disequilibrium between alleles at different loci they are said to be in linkage equilibrium

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15
Q

how is linkage disequilibrium caused

A

by linkage or by other population genetic effects such as population subdivision

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16
Q

p and q meanings

A

p + q = 1

p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

p = frequency of the dominant allele in the population
q = frequency of the recessive allele in the population
p2 = percentage of homozygous dominant individuals
q2 = percentage of homozygous recessive individuals
2pq = percentage of heterozygous individuals
17
Q

what happens if a population is not in equilibrium

A

one generation of random mating will return the population to equilibrium.

18
Q

see powerpoint for

A

example questions