Introduction to Evolution I Flashcards
How is evolution achieved by the influenza virus?
Different flu strains infecting the same cell can swap parts of their genetic material, which the goes through reassortment to give rise to different strains.
What are the genes being swapped in the influenza virus when different strains are swapping their genetic material?
- H-haemagglutinin: This binds the host cells by recognising specific receptors on their cell and is then able to infect. This specifies its host range.
- N-neuraminidase: Enzymes that allow the viral particles to be released from the cells. The better it is able to release its contents, the more the virus will spread.
What is evolution?
Accumulated, heritable changes within a population, over generations, giving rise to new species.
Evolution is an observable fact. The process by which it has most likely occurred is by natural selection, which is a theory.
How are we able to observe evolution?
Patience is needed to observe evolution.
Experiment:
1. A group of researcher took 12 colonies of E Coli that had each come from a single clone
(so 1 bacterium)
2. They spilt the culture into bacterial flask (Sub-culture) and every day for the next 27 years
they have taken that culture and they moved it into a fresh flask
3. They Froze the culture samples every 500 generations that approx. Every 75 days
4. Currently there are over 63,500 generations observed
5. One of the things they are testing the bacteria for is their ability to grow in a substrate
called citrate in the presence of oxygen (normally bacteria will not grow in citrate when
there is oxygen in the environment, it is something they use in anaerobic conditions).
6. Some of those bacterial cultures have developed the ability to grow in citrate which
evolved after about 30,000 generations in one group in particular when at the start of the
experiment they couldn’t grow in citrate.
NOTE: Earlier generations from this same ancestral E coli were repeatedly able to evolve the ability
to utilize citrate at about the same time to understand why and how this is happening you can
sequence the DNA of the bacteria.
How is citrate utilised in E.Coli?
In the presences of oxygen, the promoter is turned off which mean that bacteria do not make that enzyme and it does not grow in citrate.
However, the citrate gene sits next to another gene called RNK, which is on in the presence of oxygen.
The bacteria that are able to grow in citrate are able to duplicate the piece of DNA- duplication which has turned on a gene that is normally turned off.
How do changes in the genotype arise?
- Mutation and recombination of genetic material during reproduction.
- Natural selection: organisms better adapted to the enviroment survive to produce more offspring.
- Genetic drift: variation in relative frequency of different genotypes in small populations due to chance (seen in isolated populations).
- Gene flow: transfer of alleles from one population to another (e.g. viruses).
How are applied selection caused by humans?
- plant or animal breeding
- antibiotics (misprescribing, patients not finishing the full course), drugs, pesticide resistance.
How are mutations able to act as molecular clocks?
- mistakes can accumulate over times
- species that share a common ancestor will have fewer differences than species that are more distantly related.
How do populations evolve?
By changes in gene frequency brought about by random genetic drift, gene flow and especially by natural selection.
Populations contain genetic variation that arises by random mutations (chemical, radiation or by chance) and by recombination.
What is microevolution?
Most adaptive variants have individually slight phenotypic effects so that phenotypic changes are gradual- this microevolution.
An example of this is all people are humans but there is minor differences among us.
How does diversification come about?
It comes about by speciation (the gradual evolution of reproductive isolation among populations).
What will happen if the different processes that lead to evolution continues over a long period of time?
It will give rise to higher taxonomic levels.
What are systematics and what are the different types?
Systematics deals with classifying with different things. and includes the following:
- Taxonomy- naming of groups of organisms (taxa)
- Classification- arranging taxa into an ordered, hierarchical system.
- Phylogeny- determination of ancestral relationships of organisms and their evolutionary history.
LOOK AT NOTES TO SEE TABLE OF CLASSIFICATION
LOOK AT NOTES TO SEE TABLE OF CLASSIFICATION
What is phylogenetics?
Since new species arise from earlier species, they must share relationships. All organisms are derived from a distant, common ancestor. Phylogeny means the history of species and phylogenetic relationships can be represented using phylogenetic trees. The last universal common ancestor is named LUCA but this is not an observed organism.
How is a phylogenetic tree created?
A phylogenetic tree can be created using various different traits not necessarily a complete history of everything. Usually a morphological criteria is used.
What does monophyletic mean?
All species in a monophyletic group are descended from a common ancestor that is not the ancestor of any other group and no species descended from that ancestor are not in it.
What does paraphyletic mean?
An unnatural group that does not contain all the species descended from the most recent common ancestor; some species are outside it (e.g. reptiles- cold blooded where birds are excluded because they are warm blooded).
What does polyphyletic mean?
An unnatural group that contains species descended from several ancestors from which members of other groups also descended (e.g. hemotherms - birds, humans; also warm blooded).