Genetic Parasites Flashcards

1
Q

What is a genetic pararite?

A

Parasite of genetic system, cheats the reproductive system

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2
Q

What is Mendelian inheritance?

A

On average half offspring receive one allele and half the other allele - gives stable allele frequencies

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3
Q

What is meiotic drive/genetic drive?

A

If an allele is inherited by more than half the parent’s offspring
Allele will increase in frequency
These are parasites on the rest of the genome, need not increase organism’s fitness, only its own

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4
Q

How do you model meiotic drive?

A

If Bb heterozygotes made extra proportion (+r/2) B allele, and (-r/2) b allele, then B becomes more common
For parents that are heterozygote this affects offspring frequencies
P’B = PB + 1/2rPBb

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5
Q

How does a driving allele spread?

A

Spreads as though it confers a fitness advantage to host

Even if it reduces overall fitness will still spread as long as reduction is fitness is less than advantage of drive

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6
Q

What are killer alleles?

A

Any allele that can kill or damage the gametes containing other allele it will spread
One hypothetical mechanism = poison-antidote system
If B makes slow long-lasting poison and short lived antidote
Another mechanism is for a product of B to directly target sequence of b

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7
Q

What is over-replication?

A

Any locus that can copy itself around the genome will spread

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8
Q

What is allelic conversion?

A

Any allele that can replace the other allele with itself will spread

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9
Q

What is biased segregation?

A

Any allele that can ensure it ends up in the cell lineage leading to the egg will spread
B chromosomes do this by ensuring asymmetric division in the germline so they are biased toward ending up in the gametes

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10
Q

How does drive select for suppressors?

A

If genetic parasites decrease fitness of host it selects for suppressor alleles in 2 ways:

  1. If B allele has biased transmission it spreads at expense of b allele, any new variant b’ that can stop B will have advantage over b
  2. If driving B allele reduces overall fitness then any allele G (at any other locus in genome) that can stop B will have advantage over g
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11
Q

What is the t-haplotype in mice?

A

Works through sperm so only impacts males
Homozygote WT males (+,+) produce WT sperm
Heterozygote males for t (+,t) WT sperm poor quality compared to t-haplotype
Homozygote t-haplotype males (t,t) always sterile
Will never spread to fixation

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12
Q

What are the genetics of the t-haplotype?

A

Version of chromosome 17, suppressed recombination due to overlapping inversions

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13
Q

How does the t-haplotype spread?

A

Poison-antidote system
Distorter loci are expressed in all sperm from heterozygotes, these hyper activate Smok1 and impede sperm motility
In t-haplotype sperm this is reduced by dominant-negative action of Tcr

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14
Q

What are transposable elements?

A

Element that can copy itself around the genome

Arguably the most dominant parasite

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15
Q

What are the 2 types of transposable element?

A

DNA ‘cut & paste’ elements - excise themselves from genome and insert elsewhere using transposase encoded themselves: repair using sister chromatid or jumping in front of replication fork
Include Mariner and P-elements

RNA ‘copy & paste’ retrotransposons - expressed as RNA and reverse-transcribe into genome with reverse-transcriptase encoded themselves
Include LINES and Copia

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16
Q

How have P-elements spread in Drosophila?

A

Spread from D. willistoni to D. melanogaster between 1950-1970
Spread to D. simulans around 2004

17
Q

How much of the human genome is TE?

A

~45% genome TEs, mostly Alu and L1 LINE elements

18
Q

Why are TEs damaging?

A

Transposition into/near genes can cause genetic diseases
Ectopic recombination causes loss and rearrangement of large parts of genome - can cause lethal mutations/cancer
Uncontrolled transposition in germline can cause so much damage that apoptosis leads to infertility

19
Q

What is the evidence that TEs are deleterious?

A

Deleterious alleles kept rare by selection
TE insertions tend to be rarer than would be predicted for neutral mutations
They are deleterious (selected against)

20
Q

How are TEs suppressed?

A

The piRNA pathway of animals directs suppression of TEs in germline by using small-RNA guides to target repressive chromatin marks to transcribed TEs in the germline
When this pathway is knocked out there’s increased TE expression

21
Q

What are cytoplasmic endosymbionts?

A

Cytoplasmic genomes (mitochondria/chloroplasts) don’t display Mendelian inheritance, but can cheat

22
Q

How can bacteria skew sex ratios?

A

Cytoplasmic endosymbionts are inherited maternally through the cytoplasm
They can ‘cheat’ by ensuring host has more female offspring

Can kill males but doesn’t increase frequency, only proportion
So females have to do better, and can do this by eating eggs of dead males or have more space on plant so are bigger

Can become feminiser and turn all offspring into females

23
Q

How does the mechanism of male-killing work?

A

Eg. in flies S. poulsonii
Deletion in 1065AA protein with ankyrin repeats and de-ubiquitinase domain
Requires expression of Male-Specific Lethal (MSL) a fly gene that mediates dosage compensation in males - their X chromosomes need to express twice as much as X chromosomes in females