1-42 Population Genetics Flashcards
What is the Hardy-Weinberg Law?
p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1
p2 = dominant homozygote frequency, 2pq = heterozygote frequency, q2 = recessive homozygote frequency
p + q = 1
p = frequency of allele A, q = frequency of allele a
The H-W Law is most frequently used to determine the carrier frequency from the frequency of individuals born with the disorder.
What does the Hardy-Weinberg Law assume?
- The population is large, and matings are random with respect to the locus in question
- Allele frequencies remain constant over time because:
- *a)** There is no appreciable rate of mutation
- *b)** Individuals with all genotypes are equally capable of mating and passing on their genes (i.e., there is no selection against any particular genotype)
- *c)** There has been no significant immigration of individuals from a population with allele frequencies very different from the endogenous population
What is Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium?
The conditions under which the H-W Law holds true, allowing us to predict the number of asymptomatic, heterozygous carriers from the frequency of recessive, affected homozygotes.
For X-linked recessive traits, how can the male birth rate be used to derive female carrier frequency?
Instead of using q2 to denote the frequency of affected individuals, since males only need one copy of an X-linked allele to be affected, use q.
What is selection?
Natural selection (s) is the operation of forces that determine the relative fitness of a genotype in the population; fitness (f) is the probability of transmitting genes to the next generation and of the survival in that generation to be passed on to the next.
s = coefficient of selection f = genetic fitness (1 - s)
For some traits (e.g., sickle cell disease, thalassemia), though a recessive genotype may yield large disadvantages, the corresponding heterozygous genotype may confer an advantage, so there is less selection against these traits.
What is the rate for new mutations?
μ = 10-7 to 10-8 per locus per generation for SNPs
For rare autosomal dominants: μ = n/2N
n = # affected patients born to unaffected parents, N = total # births
De novo mutations are more likely to be inherited paternally.
Why might autosomal recessive disorders achieve high frequencies?
- Founder effect and drift
- Heterozygous advantage (e.g., sickle cell trait)
- Pleiotropy (advantage vs. disadvantage)
- Elevated mutation rate (e.g., very large genes)
- Reproductive compensation (more carriers)
- Multiple loci conferring the same phenotype (locus heterogeneity)
- Hitch-hiking (disadvantageous trait rides along with an advantageous one nearby)
- Genome instability (e.g., dynamic mutations)
- Late onset (post-reproduction)