Title: Evolution at Multiple Loci
1Evolution at Multiple Loci
- Linkage Equilibrium / Disequilibrium
2The setting and terminology
- Deals with the consideration of two loci
simultaneously - The loci are physically linked on the same
chromosome - Locus A with alleles A, a and locus B with
alleles B and b - We track not only frequencies of alleles but also
frequencies of chromosomes
3More terminology
- Possible chromosome genotypes for this example
are AB Ab aB ab - These multi-locus genotypes of chromosomes (or
gametes) are called haplotypes ( for haploid
genotype) - These haplotypes may occur in either Linkage
Equilibrium or Linkage Disequilibrium
4Loci which are linked together in Linkage
Equilibrium
- Have genotypes that are independent of one
another. - If you know the genotype at one locus (A) you
cannot predict what the genotype will be at the
other locus (B). - Example Suppose that the gene which controls the
length of toes in frogs (A) is linked to the gene
that controls the amount of webbing between the
toes (B). - Populations that are in linkage equilibrium will
show no correlation between toe length and the
degree of webbing between them.
5Loci which are in Linkage Disequilibrium
- Genotypes of the chromosomes (Haplotypes) exhibit
a non random association between the linked
genes. - If you know the genotype at one locus (A) you
have a clue about the genotype at the other locus
(B). - Example back to the gene which controls the
length of toes in frogs which is linked to the
gene that controls the amount of webbing between
the toes. - Populations that are in linkage disequilibrium
will show a correlation between toe length and
the degree of webbing between them. - For instance we might observe that the shorter
the toes the more webbing and the longer the toes
the less webbing that occurs.
6Comparing linkage equilibrium with linkage
disequilibrium
7Predicting Haplotype frequencies
8Linkage equilibrium
- If the frequencies of the haplotypes can be
calculated by multiplying the frequencies of the
two alleles involved, then they are in linkage
equilibrium. - Also, if the occurrence of B allele is equally
likely on either the A or the a chromosome the
alleles are in linkage equilibrium
9Linkage Disequilibrium
- If the frequencies of the haplotypes cannot be
calculated by multiplying the frequencies of the
two alleles involved, then they are in linkage
disequilibrium - The occurrence of B allele is not equal on the
A and the a chromosomes
10Effects of selection
11In Linkage Equilibrium
- If selection acts on one locus only....
- Selection for the A allele has no effect on the
B allele frequency. See Figure 8.8b
A 5/25 .2 a .8
A 20/25 .8 a .2B 20/25 .8 b .2
B 20/25 .8 b .2
12In Linkage Disequilibrium
- If selection acts on one locus only....
- Selection for the A allele changes the B allele
frequencies also. As a chromosomes are lost they
drag B alleles along in a disproportionate
fashion. See Figure 8.8a
A 5/25 .2 a .8
A 20/25 .8 a .2B 17/25 .68 b .32
B 8/25 .32 b .68
13Chromosome frequencies
14Linkage equilibrium
- In linkage equilibrium chromosome (haplotype)
frequencies do not change, they can still be
predicted (calculated) from allele frequencies. - B20/25.8 b5/25 .2 A20/25 .8
a5/25 .2 - AB .64 Ab .16 aB .16 ab .04
- AB 16/25 .64 Ab 4/25 .16
- aB 4/25 .16 ab 1/25 .04
Calculated haplotype frequencies
15Linkage disequilibrium
- In linkage disequilibrium chromosome frequencies
change, they can not be predicted (calculated)
from allele frequencies. - B8/25 .32 b17/25 .68 A20/25 .8
a5/25 .2 - AB.256 Ab .544 aB .064 ab .136
- AB 4/25 .16 Ab 16/25 .64
- aB 4/25 .16 ab 1/25 .04
calculated
16Three tests for linkage Equilibrium
- The frequency of B on chromosomes carrying
allele A is equal to the frequency of B on
chromosomes carrying allele a. - The frequency of any chromosome haplotypes can be
calculated by multiplying the frequencies of the
alleles which compose that haplotype - The quantity D, (coefficient of disequilibrium)0
- D gABgab - gAbgaB
- g is the frequency of the various haplotypes
Verify
17What causes linkage disequilibrium
- selection on multilocus genotypes
- genetic drift
- population admixture
18Selection on multilocus genotypes
- If we use the population from figure 8.2 (p. 283)
to provide gametes to the next generation which
is now undergoing multilocus selection we have a
possibility of the following haplotypes in each
gamete - AB Ab aB or aB
- The frequencies of the possible zygotes formed by
this population in the next generation are given
by
19View punnett square
AABB (.2034) AABb (.0576) AaBB (.1536)
AaBb (.0384) AABb (.0576) AAbb (.0144)
AaBb (.0384) Aabb (.0096) AaBB (.1536)
AaBb (.0384) aaBB (.1024) aaBb
(.0256) AaBb (.0384) Aabb (.0096) aaBb
(.0256) aabb (.0064)
This population is in Linkage equilibrium until.
See Figure 8.3 pg 287
20Differential selection now acts on this
population such that.
All individuals which are smaller than 13 units
in size (indicted by individuals with less than 3
dominant alleles) are eaten by predators and
eliminated from the population, Leaving
21A population that is now in disequilibrium
How can we verify that this population is in
linkage disequilibrium?
22Test 1 Frequency of B alleles on A and a
chromosomes is the same
- Looking at the last figure we can count the
frequency of B on A and on a
B on A
.88
B on a
1.0
23Test 2 the frequency of any haplotype can be
calculated by multiplying the frequencies of
constituent alleles
- ab frequency should be .02 but it is actually 0
24Finally we test to determine if the linkage
equilibrium value for D is equal to zero
- D gABgab - gAbgaB
- gab 0
- so D a negative value and D is not 0
25Lets try another scenario using these same
chromosomes
- Lets look at problem 3 on page 313. Work with
the people at your table to answer part a.
26We have just examined how selection on multilocus
genes can lead to linkage disequilibrium
- Genetic drift and population admixture also
disrupt linkage equilibrium - We will not be doing examples of these. If you
are interested please refer to your text on pages
288-289.
27Why and when does disequilibrium matter
- If populations are in linkage disequilibrium,
single locus models (Hardy Weinberg) may yield
inaccurate predictions about the population. WHY?
28Stop here on day one
29We will now investigate the role of sexual
reproduction in the behavior of linked genes
30First we will investigate the basic concepts of
sexual reproduction as it relates to the
distribution of alleles in offspring.
31Why sexual reproduction leads to genetic
diversity ?
- Get genetic recombination due to
- Meiosis and crossing over
- Random mating between unrelated individuals
- Millions of different gametes produced by each
parent - Billions of possible combinations of gametes
for each mating - In every generation alleles which are part of a
multilocus genotype will appear in different
combinations - An example from a highly simplified example
using eye color and hair color alleles.
32Which haplotypes are possible in the gametes from
this parent?
Haplotypes possible are rb or RB only
33(No Transcript)
34Eye color
Hair color
Now we have all four haplotypes rb RB Rb and
rB
Genetic recombination shuffles genotypes for
multilocus genes and will reduce genetic
disequilibrium
35Sexual reproduction reduces linkage
disequilibrium
- Because of crossing-over and outbreeding, Sexual
reproduction reduces linkage disequilibrium - Meiosis and sexual reproduction lead to genetic
recombinations of genes linked on the same
chromosome - Genetic recombination tends to randomize
genotypes at one locus with respect to genotypes
at another locus on the same chromosome - The result is a reduction in linkage
disequilibrium - The greater the rate of crossing over between two
loci, the faster linkage disequilibrium will be
eliminated by sexual reproduction
36An experiment on the effects of sexual mating and
equilibrium at two loci
- Fruit fly experiments of Michael Clegg
- Started with two populations both in total
linkage disequilibrium and at the opposite ends
of the disequilibrium scale - Within 50 generations of sexual reproduction, all
of the populations were approaching linkage
equilibrium
37Figure 8.7 pg 291
38The adaptive significance of sex A closer look
at the importance of the role of reproductive
strategies in the survival and evolution of
species
39- The cost is too high
- Many potential barriers to successful
reproduction - What are some of them?
- finding a mate cooperation between mates
sexual diseases mating may prove infertile and
result in no offspring - Asexual Reproduction
- Asexual reproduction is so much more efficient
and produces so many more offspring - The offspring of the original parent are clones
so they may be better adapted to the environment
and survive and reproduce more
40Which reproductive mode is better for survival ?
- John Maynard Smith (1978) developed a null model
to explore the evolutionary fate of a population
under sexual reproduction versus asexual
reproduction. - Involves two assumptions
- If both of these assumptions are met then one
form of reproduction will not be favored over
the other - 1. A females reproductive mode does not affect
the number of offspring she can produce. - 2. A females reproductive mode does not
affect the probability that her offspring will
survive
41As figure 8.17 shows, assumption 1 is not met.
Asexual parthenogenetic females will produce
larger numbers offspring than sexual reproducers
(16 of 24 are asexual)
Pg 304
- The asexuals will constitute an increasingly
larger percentage of the population in each
generation and should completely take over
42What are the potential consequences?
- Just a single mutation in a sexually reproducing
population that produces an asexual female will
lead to inevitable takeover by asexuals - This is not what happens in reality and sexual
and asexual forms of many species coexist just
fine - For sexual species to coexist means they must
confer some benefit for survival - This benefit could lie in violation of either or
both assumptions
43There would be a violation of Assumption 1 if.
A females reproductive mode does affect the
number of offspring she can produce
- ...for instance when paternal care of the young
is required - Sexual populations would leave more young because
asexuals could not take care of their young and
not as many would survive. - Not may species fall into this category.
44A violation of assumption 2 is more likely
This would be violated if a females reproductive
mode does affect the probability that her
offspring will survive
- A study with flour beetles
- Dunbrack and colleagues set up a study that
compared asexual populations and sexual
populations of flour beetles and compared the
ability of the two population to respond to an
environmental stress, namely the application of
an insecticide to their food. - Figure 8.18 shows the results
45The control alone, would supports assumption 1
that if there is an advantage in the number of
offspring produced then that type of reproduction
should be favored
10
20
30
Looking at this experimental population and
comparing it to the control shown above, we see
that there appears to be a definite advantage to
sexual reproduction. The sexually reproducing
population eventually eliminated the asexual
population when exposed to selection stress.
Why is this?
Figure 8.18 pg 306
10
20
30
46Sexual strains can evolve, asexual strains cannot
47Same experiment but with the black beetle being
given the sexual role. We see essentially the
same results
We can conclude that assumption 2 is incorrect
10
20
30
48At the level of population genetics, reduction of
linkage disequilibrium is the only consequence of
sex
- Therefore if a population is already in linkage
equilibrium there is no advantage to sexual
reproduction - Population-genetic Models which propose
evolutionary benefits for sex must include two
things - 1. A mechanism to produce linkage disequilibrium
- 2. An explanation for why genes that tend to
reduce disequilibrium are favored
49Theories dealing with the advantages of sexual
reproduction
- There are two categories of models based on the
source of linkage disequilibrium - 1. Those that propose genetic drift
- 2. Those that propose selection on multilocus
genotypes.
50Pairs of genes most likely to show
disequilibrium are those that are situated so
closely together on the chromosome that crossing
over between them is rare.
- Linkage disequilibrium is most often a problem in
asexual populations since sexual reproduction
tends to eliminate linkage disequilibrium - In freely mating populations most pairs of loci
should be in linkage equilibrium and single-locus
models will work well most of the time
51Mullers Ratchet Genetic Drift plus Mutation
can make sex beneficial
- Works in populations which are small, where drift
is a potent mechanism - As mutations occur in asexual populations, they
are passed on to all offspring of the asexual
parent - Over time several mutations can be accumulated in
a population (the frequency of each individual
mutant allele is a balance between mutation rate,
the strength of selection and genetic drift) - Asexual populations are doomed to accumulate
deleterious mutations which are passed on to all
offspring - Asexual populations cannot get rid of the
mutations which are accumulating until the
population is eliminated
52Asexual Sub-populations are separate and
reproductively isolated from one another. These
sub-populations will have different mutations and
differing numbers of mutations
- The fittest of the sub-populations are those with
the fewest mutations - However, drift can eliminate any of these
populations by chance - Figure 8.20 pg 308 shows how this works
53Each bar represents an asexual sub-population.
Sub populations will differ in the number of
mutations they contain. The sub-population with
the fewest deleterious mutations will be the
fittest.
If the 0 mutation group is lost by drift then the
fittest group now becomes the population with
only one mutation
If drift then takes the1-mutation sub-
population, the fittest is the one with 2
mutations etc
54- Over time as the populations age the shift is
toward the accumulation of more and more
mutations
- Genetic load increases, the populations are less
and less fit and ultimately the population
becomes extinct - Genetic Load the accumulation of deleterious
alleles, the more harmful mutations there are in
a population the greater the genetic load.
55Summary of Mullers Ratchet
- The milder the deleterious mutations, the quicker
the ratchet works. If mutations are too serious,
selection will eliminate them before drift can
carry them to fixation - There are examples from laboratory experiments
and in nature that show that mutation and drift
could indeed be a mechanism to favor sexual
reproduction - However this mechanism works very slowly over a
long period of time
56Sexual reproduction breaks the ratchet
- In the case of sexually reproducing species,
groups which are lost by chance can be
reconstituted by outcrossing and recombination - Example if the 0 mutation group has been lost
and two individuals each with just 1 mutation
mate, then 1/4 of their offspring will be
mutation-free - Sex reduces linkage disequilibrium by recreating
the missing genotypes
57Selection Caused by a changing environment
- In general constant environments favor asexual
reproducers that are well adapted to the current
environment - When the environment changes they are at a
disadvantage - The changing environment theories for the
advantage of sex assume trade-offs such that - genotypes that do well in one type of environment
necessarily do more poorly in others
58Population Genetic Model of varying selection
- Basically involves alternating between a
selection regime which favors selection of
particular multilocus genotypes at one point in
time and then later selection is for a different
set of multilocus genotypes - Sex can recreate the genotypes that were
recently eliminated but have now become favored - Differences in fitness may be caused by either
physical changes in the environment or by changes
in biotic interactions ( Elderflower example)
59The Red Queen Hypothesis
- Red Queen hypothesis, refers to the huffy chess
piece in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking
Glass. In Looking Glass Land, the Queen tells
Alice, "It takes all the running you can do, to
keep in the same place." - According to the Red Queen hypothesis, sexual
reproduction persists because it enables many
species to rapidly evolve new genetic defenses
against parasites that attempt to live off of
them.
60PBS evolution video segment
- You may click the button below to review the main
points of the video. - As the parasites adapt to new genotypes In the
fish, if they are asexual they are susceptible - Meanwhile the sexuals can continue to recombine
and present resistant genotypes on a regular
basis
61Figure8.22 page 311
I
62Summary of the advantage of Sex
- In the context of population genetics, the
advantage of sex is to reduce linkage
disequilibrium - population-genetic model for the adaptive value
of sex has two parts - 1. A mechanism for the creation of linkage
disequilibrium - 2. a reason why selection favors traits that
tend to reduce linkage disequilibrium
63There are two classes of models
- Those that credit genetic drift with introducing
disequilibrium by creating high fitness genotypes
that can be lost by drift - natural selection patterns which continuously
alter the currently best-adapted genotype. Sex
allows lost genotypes to be reclaimed that were
formerly selected against
64The End
65Fig. 8.2a pg 283
66Figure 8.2b pg 283
Go to conditions
67Figure 8.3a pg 287
68 of chromosomes that are A .2304 .0576
.0576 .1536 .4992/.6528 76
of chromosomes that are a .1536/.6528 24
B on A .2304 .0576 .1536 / .4992 88
B on a .1536/.1536 1.0
b on A .0576 / .4992 12
69View punnett square
AABB (.2034) AABb (.0576) AaBB (.1536)
AaBb (.0384) AABb (.0576) AAbb (.0144)
AaBb (.0384) Aabb (.0096) AaBB (.1536)
AaBb (.0384) aaBB (.1024) aaBb
(.0256) AaBb (.0384) Aabb (.0096) aaBb
(.0256) aabb (.0064)
70(No Transcript)
71.2304 ½ (.0576) ½ (.0576) ½ (.1536) ½
(.1536) .2304 .0576 .0576 ½ (.1536) ½
(.1536)
.2304.0576.1536 .2304.0576.0576.1536
.4416 .4992
0.88