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Quantitative Genetics

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We can estimate the effects of multiple genes by making some assumptions: ... and narrow-sense heritability- p. 121; H2= Vg/Vp; if the # is close to 1, then ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quantitative Genetics


1
Chapter 6-
  • Quantitative Genetics

2
Where were going
  • Define the term
  • Be able to determine the of genes involved
  • Phenotype-Genotype relationships- nature vs
    nurture, particularly as it deals with
  • Heritability- and as an aside, variance.

3
Key points
  • We can estimate the effects of multiple genes by
    making some assumptions
  • 1) there are multiple genes affecting the trait.
  • 2) some alleles at these sites are additive,
    while others are non-additive. Additive is just
    as in normal usage- e.g., additive alleles would
    add to your height. Non-additive would produce,
    say, all or none effects- such as plant height in
    peas- tall and short.
  • 3) the genes contribute approximately equally

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¼2 1/16
¼3 1/64
¼4 1/256
¼5 1/1024
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So, lets do a few problems..
9
Heritability
  • This is a measure of the relative influence of
    genotype and environment on variance.
  • Variance- study on your own- its basically a
    statistical measure of, well, variance. We take
    the average, the difference between the average
    and each value, and we square it we then divide
    by the of samples -1.
  • What heritability means high value- lots of
    variation in population? selection will work.
  • Low heritability little genetic variation
    selection wont help.

10
  • Broad and narrow-sense heritability- p. 121 H2
    Vg/Vp if the is close to 1, then the effect
    of environment is negligible if the is close
    to 0, the effect of the environment is large.
    You book has a situation that allows this to be
    calculated.

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  • Narrow sense h2 VA/VP here we only look at
    variation in traits are additive in nature- we
    exclude dominant variance, since these traits are
    less affected by selection- if the dominant trait
    is there, it, well, dominates. The h2 is useful
    in determining how easily selection can work.
  • experimental determination h2 R/S

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  • Concordance if both of a pair- brothers, or
    twins, have a trait, it is concordant. Useful in
    the nature/nurture controversy.
  • One of the more interesting statistics-
    Concordance homosexuality for identical twins is
    38.
  • QTLs Through complicated patterns of breeding,
    and knowing where certain regions are on the
    chromosome, we can locate genes that affect
    Q.T.s.

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  • http//www.narth.com/docs/whitehead2.html
  • J. Michael Bailey, Michael P. Dunne, and Nicholas
    G. Martin, "Genetic and Environmental Influences
    on Sexual Orientation and Its Correlates in an
    Australian Twin Sample," J. Personal Social
    Psychology 78 (2000) 524-536.
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