Genetic Variation III Flashcards

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1
Q

How is inbreeding measured?

A

Via a coefficient of inbreeding ‘F’ which ranges from 0 to 1. If 0 this means that mating occurs randomly in large population.

Value of 1 means all alleles are identical by descent.

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2
Q

How are inbreeding coefficients measured?

A

By pedigree analysis or from reduction of heterozygosity in population.

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3
Q

What happens in the case of inbreeding?

A

Repeated generations of inbreeding will eventually split a heterozygous population into a series of completely homozygous lines.

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4
Q

What is the correlation between F and IQ?

A

for every 10% increase in F the mean Iq of children dropped 6 points.

Mortality increases with close inbreeding - children of 1st cousins have 40% increase in mortality over that in unrelated individuals.

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5
Q

How many genes are shared between 1st degree, 2nd degree, and 3rd degree relatives?

A

1st degree: 1/2

2nd degree: 1/4

3rd degree: 1/8

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6
Q

What is the coefficient of relationship?

A

Proportion of alleles shared by 2 persons as a result of common genetic descent from one or more recent common ancestors (R)

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7
Q

What is the coefficient of inbreeding?

A

Probability that a homozygote has identical alleles at a locus as a result of common genetic descent from a recent ancestor.

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8
Q

What is the coeffecient of relationship and coefficient of inbreeding in children of parents that are 1st cousins?

A

If parents are 1st cousins -> R = 1/8 and F = 1/16

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9
Q

How are the coefficient of relationship and inbreeding related?

A

Inbreeding coefficient is always half that of inbreeding.

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10
Q

What is a consanguineous union?

A

A union between people that are biologically related as second cousins (F>= 0.0156) or closer.

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11
Q

What processes are affecting the frequency of alleles in the next generation?

A

Selection

Mutation

Migration

Mating pattern

Random genetic drift

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12
Q

How is the fitness of an individual influenced by genotype?

A

Different genotypes have different rates of survival and reproduction. This means that they have different fitness.

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13
Q

What happens to genetic frequency of characters that are more successful at survival and reproduction?

A

They will increase and be selected for.

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14
Q

What is a selective sweep?

A

in genetics, a selective sweep is the reduction or elimination of variation among the nucleotides near a mutation in DNA. It results from a beneficial allele’s having recently reached fixation due to strong positive natural selection.

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15
Q

What kind of positive selection does MHC undergo?

A

Strong positive selection to maximise genetic variation. Individuals that are heterozygous are thus better protected from pathogens.

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16
Q

What are the 6 most polymorphic HLA loci?

A

A, B, C, DPB, DQB, DRB

17
Q

What drives the MHC polymorphism?

A

The pathogen drives selection:
Strong selection pressure: Emergence of mutant pathogens that seek to evade MHC-mediated detection

Gene duplication (multiple MHC genes with different peptide binding specificities)

Many MHC genes are extraordinarily polymorphic.