Mutations Flashcards

1
Q

what are germ line mutations?

A
  • affects gametes
  • mutation transmitted via sexual reproduction
  • mutations in the germline create new variation (alleles) and can be heritable
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2
Q

what are somatic mutations

A
  • affects all daughter cells of a single cell
  • not heritable (but can be passed down in plants)
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3
Q

Describe some of the smaller changes that cause mutations:

A
  • single base changes (substitution)
  • DNA of different sizes is inserted/deleted (in/del) into the middle of an existing sequence
    • if in/del isn’t a factor of 3 then frameshift occurs.
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4
Q

Describe some of the larger changes that cause mutations:

A
  • DNA is copied a second time or switched around
  • chromosomes join together (fusion) or lost (aneuploidy)
  • entire genomes duplicated
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5
Q

Explain how variation is introduced?

A
  • Regulatory regions: mutations of genes may affect expression
  • Increase/decrease in mRNA abundance
  • Coding regions: mutations of genes may affect protein function: be functionally the same, large or small functional differences
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6
Q

Why is there a ‘two-sold cost of sex’?

A
  • Evolution should savour asexual reproduction:
    - much faster
    - no search cast w/ finding a mate
    - no risk of STI’s
  • Benefits of SR:
    - Combing beneficial alleles
    - generation of novel genotypes
    - Faster evolution
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7
Q

What are some mating systems:

A
  1. assortative mating (non-random)
    a. breeding like w/ like
    b. decrease genetic diversity
    c. humans, sea snails, sea slugs, etc
  2. Disassortative mating (random):
    a. wolves in yellow stem
    b. not very common
    c. maintains diversity
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8
Q

Define genetic drift:

A
  • Random changes in allele frequencies
  • Alleles become more or less common by chance
  • Always an element of randomness in determining which alleles are passed on by the parental population
  • allele frequencies changes via genetic drift results from sampling error.
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9
Q

Buri:

A
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10
Q

Explain the role and importance of population size:

A
  • Genetic drift is most pronounced in small population size.
  • P usually = 0.5
  • In small populations genetic drift is a stronger enough evolutionary agent of change
  • outcomes mere unpredictable
  • possibility of large changes is greater
  • large populations buffer genetic drift
  • Bottleneck and founder effect decrease population size and genetic diversity.
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11
Q

Case study on Cheetahs

A

go through notes.

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