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Evolution at the Molecular Level

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Evolution at the Molecular Level Outline Evolution of genomes Review of various types and effects of mutations How larger genomes evolve through duplication and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evolution at the Molecular Level


1
Evolution at the Molecular Level
2
Outline
  • Evolution of genomes
  • Review of various types and effects of mutations
  • How larger genomes evolve through duplication and
    divergence
  • Molecular archeology based on gene duplication,
    diversification, and selection
  • globin gene family an example of molecular
    evolution

3
Speculations on how the first cell arose
  • The first step to life must have been a
    replicator molecule
  • The original replicator may have been RNA
  • Ribozymes?
  • More complex cells and multicellular organisms
    appeared gt 2 billion years after cellular
    evolution

4
  • Earliest cells evolved into three kingdoms of
    living organisms
  • Archaea and bacteria now contain no introns
  • Introns late evolutionary elaboration

Fig. 21.3
5
Basic body plans of some Burgess shale organisms
Many species resulting from metazoan explosion
have disappeared
Fig. 21.4
6
Evolution of humans
  • 35 mya primates
  • 6 mya humans diverged from chimpanzees

Fig. 21.5
7
Evolution of Humans
  • Human and chimpanzee genomes 99 similar
  • Karyotypes almost same
  • No significant difference in gene function
  • Divergence may be due to a few thousand isolated
    genetic changes not yet identified
  • Probably regulatory sequences

8
DNA alterations form the basis of genomic
evolution
  • Mutations arise in several ways
  • Replacement of individual nucleotides
  • Deletions / Insertions 1bp to several Mb
  • Single base substitutions
  • Missense mutations replace one amino acid codon
    with another
  • Nonsense mutations replace amino acid codon with
    stop codon
  • Splice site mutations create or remove
    exon-intron boundaries
  • Frameshift mutations alter the ORF due to base
    substitutions
  • Dynamic mutations changes in the length of
    tandem repeat elements

9
Effect of mutations on population
  • Neutral mutations are unaffected by agents of
    selection
  • Deleterious mutations will disappear from a
    population by selection against the allele
  • Rare mutations increase fitness

10
Genomes grow in size through repeated duplications
  • Some duplications result from transposition
  • Other duplications arise from unequal crossing
    over

11
  • Genetic drift and mutations can turn duplications
    into pseudogenes
  • Diversification of a duplicated gene followed by
    selection can produce a new gene

12
  • Genome size increases through duplication of
    exons, genes, gene families and entire genomes

Fig. 21.10
13
  • Basic structure of a gene

Fig. 21.11
14
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15
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16
Genes may elongate by duplication of exons to
generate tandem exons that determine tandem
functional domainse.g., antibody molecule
Fig. 21.12a
17
Exon shuffling may give rise to new genese.g.,
tissue plasminogen activator (TPA)
Fig. 21.12b
18
Duplications of entire gene can create multigene
families
Fig. 21.13a
19
Unequal crossing over can expand and contract
gene numbers in multigene families
Fig. 21.13b
20
Fig. 21.14a
  • Intergenic gene conversion can increase variation
    among members of a multigene family
  • One gene is changed, the other is not

21
Concerted evolution can lead to gene homogeneity
Fig. 21.15
Unequal crossing over
Gene conversion
22
Evolution of gene superfamilies
  • Large set of genes divisible into smaller sets,
    or families
  • Genes in each family more closely rated to each
    other than to other members of the family
  • Arise by duplication and divergence

23
Evolution of globin superfamily
Fig. 21.16
 
24
Organisation of globin genes
Fig. 21.16
25
Developmental variation in gene expression
a-like chains - z a b-like chains - e,
g, d, b
Fig. 21.16
Adult human made of a2b2 97 a2d2 -
2 a2g2-1 (fetal persistence)
26
Gene expression controlled by location
e embryonic yolk sac g yolk sac fetal
liver b d adult bone marrow
Fig. 21.16
27
Evolution of mouse globin superfamily
Fig. 21.16
28
Evolution of mouse globin superfamily
Fig. 21.16
29
The Haemoglobinopathies
  • Thalassemias
  • Anaemias associated with impaired synthesis of Hb
    subunits
  • Thalassaemias can arise from different mutations
    causing a disease of varying severity.
  • a0/b0 thalassaemias globin chain absent
  • a/b thalassaemias normal globin chain in
    reduced amounts

30
a- thalassemias
31
a- thalassemias
deletion of one or both a globins in an a gene
cluster Severity depends on whether the
individual has 1,2,3, or 4 missing a globin
genes.
GENOTYPE PHENOTYPE a a aa Normal aa
aa Silent carrier asymptomatic
condition. a-thalassaemia 2 a a
aa a-thalassaemia trait minor anaemic
conditions aa a a aa a
a HbH mild moderate anaemia a a a a
Hydrops foetalis foetus survives until
around birth
32
b- thalassemias
33
b- thalassemias
  • Non coding regulatory regions
  • Exons
  • Introns (InterVening Sequences)
  • 3 cleavage mutant
  • deletion
  • RNA splicing mutant
  • transcription mutant
  • nonsense mutation
  • frameshift insertion
  • frameshift deletion
  • Mutations in b globin cluster are of different
    types
  • gene deletion
  • transcriptional mutation
  • RNA processing mutations
  • RNA cleavage signal mutations
  • Nonsense frameshift mutations

34
b- thalassemias
35
main genetic mechanisms that contribute to the
phenotypic diversity of the b-thalassaemias.
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