BIO370 Exam 2 Study Questions
A new, neutral mutation (s=0) arises in a small population of 1000 fruit flies living under ideal conditions in a laboratory (i.e., not under selection). What is the probability that the allele will ultimately go to fixation (i.e., reach a frequency of 1.0)?
For a new neutral mutation (s=0), the probability of fixation is equal to an allele's current frequency. If p=0.5, chance of fixation or loss is 0.5 OR 1/2(1000) = 0.0005
measures divergence in neutral genetic marker
Fst
How does QST relate to FST? Describe how you would collect data to determine each of these values.
Fst: measures divergence in neutral genetic markers. Qst measures divergence in quantitative traits. if Qst=Fst, neutral trait, no spatially divergent selection on the trait, differentiation in Qst explained by genetic drift, gene flow balance alone. Qst>Fst, trait has diverged more than would be expected by genetic drift-flow balance alone, divergent selection may underly phenotypic divergence among populations Qst<Fst, stabilizing selection may be acting to maintain the phenotype across populations
sex can reconstitute mutation free state, sex can also remove mutations because recombination can produce individuals with MANY deleterious mutations, these are removed by strong selection, purge the population of mutations
Koharshov's hatchet
types of transposons
LINEs, SINEs, DNA transposons, Retrotransposons
measures divergence in quantitative traits
Qst
How does sexual reproduction speed up adaptive evolution? Describe with words or with a drawing.
Whereas asexual organisms have to wait for consecutive advantageous mutations to occur in a single lineage, sexual organisms can recombine and bring together favorable mutations. Segregation can bring together 2 copies of a good mutation at a single locus, recombination can also bring together good mutations at two different loci. It also helps for when an advantageous mutation can be trapped by deleterious mutations. (recombination negates the ruby in the rubbish effect)
males success is usually limited by what
access to mates
two main categories of hypotheses that explain why organisms age and die
accumulation of damage theories and evolutionary theories
a behavior that benefits/increases the fitness of another at the expense of the actor
altruism
beneficial in a constant environment according to the lottery-bet hedging model
asexual
explain the notion that sex speeds up adaptive evolution
asexuals have to wait for consecutive advantageous mutations to occur in a single lineage, sexual organisms can recombine and bring together favorable mutations
what does hemagglutinin do
binds to sialic acid on host cells, virus enters cell
what does AZT do
blocks active domain in reverse transcriptase of HIV
Describe the simplified equation predicting the change in allele frequency from one generation of selection. How does the response to selection change with allele frequency?
change in p=p(1-p)s. response to selection will be highest when allele frequency is intermediate (0.50 yields 0.25 as change in p) higher or lower than 0.5 will decrease the response to selection
ideal population
constant, no selection, all individuals have the same chance of leaving offspring
A man returns to Austin after a trip around the globe, and succumbs to some novel strain of avian flu. Describe how you could apply phylogenetic methods to track down the geographical source of the virus.
create a phylogenetic tree to determine the most recent ancestor. where does the new flu fit on the tree- determine by counting the number of like mutations
pros of irrational design
creation of huge amounts of novel variation, dont have to understand the mechanism
limits to bet-hedging/lottery models
data shows the opposite. tropics: stable, lots of sexual organisms. artics: variable, lots of asexual organisms
limitations to the speeding of adaptive evolution
depends on the rate of beneficial mutations, if they happen frequently, wait time may not be long enough to matter
limits to red queen hypothesis
depends on very strong selection, parasites can select for clonal diversity rather than sex
two different types of evolutionary forces
deterministic and stochastic
fitness through production of own offspring
direct
findings of fitch's experiment
divergence has occurred at a rate too rapid to be explained by genetic drift
1/Ne >> s
drift much stronger, selection can be ignored
number of indidividuals in an idealized population that would have the same intensity of random genetic drift
effective population size
Define effective population size. Provide two examples of situations that would cause the effective population size to be smaller than the census population.
effective population size is the number of individuals in an idealized population that would have the same intensity of random genetic drift. changes in N through time because of genetic bottleneck, or population subdivision (founding effect) or an unequal number of males and females
high reproductive effort, very costly to reproduce
female function
proof that female mating preference evolves
females of different species have different preferences, genetic variation in preference has been directly measured, artificial selection can change preferences
Verbally describe the process of Fisher's "runaway" evolution of male display and female preference. Describe two forces that could limit Fisherian runaway
fisher's runaway describes the linkage disequilibrium between female preference and male display. This does not denote physical gene linkage. the male trait becomes amplified to the point where the it becomes detrimental. two forces that could limit: if the population went back to random mating, runaway would stop and covariation would decrease. if the genetic variability goes away, the trait would become fixed and the runaway would be bounded.
Describe a scenario depicting how gene flow can prevent local adaptation. Similarly, describe a scenario depicting how gene flow can promote adaptive evolution.
gene flow preventing local adaptation: when gene flow is acting as a homogenizing force, constantly blending populations, for example in the mine plants. gene flow promoting local adaptation: if there was no variation to start out with
What effect does genetic drift have on the distribution of genetic variation within and among populations? What effect does gene flow have on genetic variation within and among populations?
genetic drift generates heterogeneity among populations and causes genetic variation to be lost over time within populations because one allele will ultimately become fixed. gene flow is a homogenizing force between populations, meaning it decreases genetic variation among populations. In some cases it can increase within population variation if the gene flow introduces new genetic variation to a population.
indirect selection on preference genes
good genes hypothesis
example of direct selection on preference genes
good territory, nupital gifts, help with parental care
three tradeoffs in life history
growth, maintenance, reproduction
predominant coat protein of influenza
hemagglutinin
Describe Hamilton's kin selection model for the evolution of altruistic behavior.
if rB > c you would expect a mutation that favors the evolution of altruistic behavior. r= relatedness of actor/recipient. B= fitness benefit to recipient c= cost to actor
What is Muller's ratchet?
in asexual organisms, there is an accumulation of deleterious mutations over time, the mutation free individuals lost by genetic drift. once lost, they are lost forever
fitness through effects of relatives
indirect
approach that relies on selection to reach outcome
irrational design
selection favoring behavior between individuals that share genes through kinship
kin selection
What is linkage disequilibrium? Give a specific example of how it can play an important evolutionary role
linkage disequilibrium is the statistical correlation between alleles at two or more loci that differ from those expected based on frequency of alleles in a particular population. example: fischers runaway model
problems with the wear and tear hypotheses
living organisms have the ability to regenerate, use often related to increased quality, aging resembles an evolved trait- vast differences among even closely related species
why do females choose what they choose?
male signaling
In your own works, define the "good genes" hypothesis. Describe an experiment to test the "good genes" model of the evolution of female preference.
males with good genes are healthier and can devote more resources to appearance and displays, may have offspring with the best chances of reproductive success. indirect selection. design an experiment with sibships, 2 offspring that have the same mom but different dads, sibships control for maternal genes. this allows us to see the effect of the male genes
there is a huge variability in reproductive success in ______ populations, but there is not in __________ populations
males, females
how much time and energy it takes you to find a mate
mating effort
any aspect of the female that biases the kind of mate she chooses, does not require cognition
mating preference
list the order of the hierarchy of units on which selection can act
molecules, organelles, individuals, kin/group selection
Provide two examples demonstrating the fact that patterns of selection depends on environmental context.
moth and sickle cell anemia
a mutation that causes death later in life may have very little impact on an organism's lifetime reproductive success
mutation accumulation
two evolutionary theories on why organisms age and die
mutation accumulation, tradeoff hypothesis
Why do organisms die? Provide at least two plausible hypotheses based on evolutionary theory.
mutation accumulation: a mutation that causes death later in life (after reproduction) may have very little impact on an organism's lifetime reproductive success. the later in life mutations exert bad effects, the more weakly they are selected against. trade off hypothesis: mutations may occur that involve a pleiotropic tradeoff between reproduction early and survival later in life. any mutation favoring reproductive success early should be favored, even if it has detrimental effects later in life.
late acting deleterious genes should accumulate at many different loci, making prospect of finding single aging gene impossible
mutation balance selection theory
name the three types of deterministic evolutionary forces
mutation, natural selection, gene flow
name the five evolutionary forces
mutation, selection, random genetic drift, gene flow, mating system
challenges of irrational design
need variation, need replication, need differential selection/screening scheme
Five Hardy-Weinberg Conditions
no selection, no gene flow, no mutation, random mating, large population size
when spread of virus is rapid, high virulence okay or not okay
okay
engineer new function base on knowledge of how a molecule works
rational design
cooperation can evolve as long as favors are returned, this can evolve through individual selection level, benefit must outweigh the cost
reciprocal altruism
hypothesis that says sex is needed to fight disease, constant arms race between the host and parasites, genotype cycling, sex advantageous because recombination produces novel combinations
red queen hypothesis
sexes can be defined as a tradeoff between what two things?
reproductive effort and mating effort
female success is limited to what
resource availability
when a chromosome with no deleterious mutations has higher fitness than the one with the beneficial one and deleterious mutation
ruby in the rubbish effect
1/Ne << s
selection much stronger, drift can be ignored
every cell has multiple copies of the chloroplast and mitochondria genomes, genomes compete against each other
selection on organelles
female preference is simply a side effect of sensory evolution which has evolved for other reasons
sensory bias
divison of soma vs. germ cells
sequestration of cells that are to be making your gametes, soma constantly dividing and at some point there is a limit, that is why the germ line is sequestered
name the ecological theories of why sex is beneficial
sex helps cope with variable environment (lottery-bet hedging models, red queen hypothesis)
may have been more important for the origin of sex, less important in terms of maintenece of sex
sex required for DNA repair
the three genetic hypotheses that explain sex
sex required for DNA repair, sex speeds up adaptive evolution, sex can purge deleterious mutations
differential/nonrandom reproductive success due to ability to obtain mates, frequency dependent, doesn't fit fischers model
sexual selection
Name two different mechanisms by which male-male sexual selection works. Give an example of each
sperm competition- make more sperm, block destroy other males' sperm. (dragonflies, flies, butterflies the male scoop out previous sperm, male reproductive organ breaks off and stays in the female so that no other males can fertilize her) infanticide- males kill juveniles of a species so that female finishes lactating and is able to go back to being pregnant. (in lions, infanticide results in 10% of all lion mortality)
how do preferences evolve?
stabilizing selection between sexual selection and natural selection
as you accumulate mutations, there is a buffering to some point and then you reach a certain point where there is a huge packing together of deleterious mutations, selection would purge the population of deleterious mutations
synergistic epistasis
may be related to cancer and processed cell death
telomere shortening
What determines the strength of genetic drift in nature? How does the strength of drift impact the maintenance of genetic variation?
the effective population size determines the strength of genetic drift in nature. small effective population size leads to strong drift, less likely to maintain diversity. large populations more likely to maintain genetic diversity.
limitation to purging deleterious mutations hypthesis
the ratchet works slowly, depends on mutation rate, population size, selection. the hatchet depends on epistatic selection, should be important in effective population sizes with high mutation rates
What are two main types of sexual selection? How do they differ?
the two main types of sexual selection are intrasexual selection (male-male competition) and intersexual selection (female choice). male male competition- sex with lower parental investment will show greater mating effort, leads to competition in access to mates. female choice- sex with higher parental investment will be choosy in mate selection
Describe three possible costs of sexual reproduction.
there is a two fold cost of sex (females contribute most of the resources by only half the genes, males contribute half the genes but essentially no resources, a female would be able to transmit twice as many genes for the same price of offspring), finding a partner can be a problem, STDs, sex breaks up good combinations of genes
Sewall Wright argued that the interplay of random genetic drift, natural selection, and gene flow would have the best chance of leading a species to a global fitness peak. What did Wright name this process? Give a verbal description of adaptive evolution through this process. What will determine the whether peak shifts can happen?
this is the shifting balance theory. a species divided in subpopulations small enough that random genetic drift important. drift in one subpopulations carries it past an adaptive valley to a new adaptive peak. this subpopulation has increased fitness. it makes more offspring, which spread the new adaptation to other populations through increased gene flow. flip over adaptive landscape. genetic drift moves the ball left and right randomly, allowing peak shift.
mutations may occur that involve a pleiotropic trafe off between reproduction early and survival late in life
trade off hypothesis
Describe one scenario where selection may be in conflict across levels of biological organization.
transposons: DNA sequences that code for their own replication within the genome. can copy itself and insert into other places in the genome, major source of deleterious mutations. selection for transposons with the highest fitness but also selection at the higher level against deleterious mutations
What are the key pieces of data required to test the sensory bias hypothesis for the evolution of female preference?
you need a phylogenetic tree so that you can determine whether the female preference trait or the male display trait appeared first
specific parts of the protein recognized and remembered by the immune system
antigenic sites
inclusive fitness
direct + indirect
probability that the other individual carries a rare gene that you have
relatedness
energy it takes to have offspring
reproductive effort
Why might sex be valuable in a variable environment?
this is from the lottery/bet-hedging models, sexual reproduction includes lottery tickets with many different numbers, if environment if variable, this is more beneficial
You recently joined a team that is creating a booklet of strategies to help disadvantaged farmers in Indonesia effectively spray their crops with multiple pesticides. What are some strategies you include in the booklet and why?
use the method of refugia to control increase in resistance. tell them to not plant 100% of the crops with the pesticides, make sure there is 20% that hasn't been exposed to pesticides. dilute and keep resistance insects from being selected for
problems with evolutionary theories that explain aging
why differences among species, why exponential decline, why genes of major effect rather than minor
gene that increases survival but decreases reproduction
antagonistic pleiotropy
accumulation of damage theories
cell division limit, programmed death, rate of life, waste/accumulation/free-radical damage
using evolutionary processes to engineer new chemicals, molecules, or organisms for particular use
directed evolution
may cause a species to move downhill on an adaptive landscape because it causes random fluctuations in allele frequencies
genetic drift
name the stochastic evolutionary force
genetic drift
random changes in gene frequencies due to sampling error
genetic drift
What effect will random genetic drift have on populations that initially are genetically similar?
genetic drift generates heterogeneity among populations
Selection is expected to drive deleterious mutations to extinction in natural populations. Nonetheless, deleterious mutations exist (sometimes in high frequency) in natural populations. Give an explanations for why this might occur.
if there is linkage on a chromosome, good and bad genes might be passed on together. pleiotropic tradeoff. muller's ratchet. deleterious mutations that dont have an effect until after reproductive age
high mating effort, low reproductive cost
male function
when spread of virus is rare, high virulence okay or not okay
not okay
heterozygote has the highest selection
overdominance
selection against the heterozygote
underdominance
usually takes a species ____ to evolve
2 years