Population Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

Population Genetics

A
  • the study of the distribution of genes in populations, of the factors that maintain or change the frequency of genes and genotypes from generation to generation
  • used primarily in: genetic counseling, planning genetic screening programs, explains why we can assume people with autosomal dominant disorders are heterozygous and why both parents of children with autosomal recessive disorders are usually carriers
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Population screening requirements

A
  • cost effective- frequency of genetic disease, cost of screening versus treatment
  • intervention/treatment- need to be able to take some action
  • population compliance- perception of the disease
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Population

A
  • in a genetic sense is a breeding group or gene pool
  • most human populations are composed of subgroups which were originally relatively separate (isolates)
  • in modern times there groups are being mixed, especially in US “Melting Pot”
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Gene frequencies

A
  • the genetic constitution of a population, referring to the gene it carries, is described by the array of gene frequencies
  • the frequencies of all alleles at any one locus must add up to unity- p+q=1
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Genotypes

A

-the genotypes must also add up to unity
P + H + Q = 1
-where, P= homozygotes for one allele
-Q= homozygotes for the other allele and H is heterozygotes
-we observe the phenotype, but sometimes we can derive the genotypes assuming H-W is true and thus the allele frequencies

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Hardy-Weinberg Law

A

-consider a single autosomal locus with two alleles A and a with frequencies p and q (p+q=1)
-with random mating, i.e. random mixing of sperm and eggs then the expected genotype frequencies in the progeny are:
p^2 +2pq +q^2

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Hardy-Weinberg Proportions

A
  • if a population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium then genotype frequencies can be derived from gene frequencies
  • usually 2pq&raquo_space;q^2
  • derive heterozygous frequency from the homozygous recessive frequency
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Ratio of carriers to autosomal recessive affected individuals

A
  • the ratio of carriers to affected individuals increases as the frequency of the disease decreases
  • the rarer the disease (the smaller q) the greater the ratio of carriers to affected individuals so harder to remove disease alleles
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Recessives appear sporatic

A

Parents of autosomal recessive are both carriers

-for one of the parents to not be a carrier requires a new mutation, >99% of CF children born to carrier parents

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Dominants are heterozygotes

A
  • 2pq>q^2
  • for dominant disorder to be homozygous require both parents to be affected or a new mutation (unlikely)
  • in reality homozygotes are usually more severe, even lethal or undocumemted
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

X-linked recessive traits

A

-diseased male is equal to q,
-carrier female- 2pq
-affected female q^2
ratio of carrier females to affected males 2:1
ratio of affected males to females 5000 :1

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

H-W assumptions

A

1) the population is large, and matings are random with respect to the locus in questions
2) 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

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Random mating

A
  • random mating (panmixia) is when individual has an equal chance of mating with any other individual in the population
  • exceptions to random mating:
  • assortative mating
  • usually positive, generally increase the proportion of homozygotes
  • stratification into subgroups e.g. race, ethnic groups, congenitally deaf, religious
  • negative assortative mating (increases the proportion of heterozygotes)
  • little long term consequence to the population
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Consanguinity (inbreeding)

A
  • relationship by descent from a common ancestor
  • found proportionally more often in rare recessive disease
  • the absolute risk of abnormal offspring in first cousin marriages is less than double the population risk; consanguity at the level of third cousin or less is not considered significant
  • we each carry on average more than 10 detrimental recessive genes
  • results in increased frequency of autosomal recessive disorders compared to H-W expected incidence
    ex. Tay-Sachs
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Population Size

A
  • large population size (100s rather than 10s)
  • world population recently exceeded 7 billion but was less than a million through late Paleolithic. Effective population size was ~10,000 for most of our history
  • no random fluctuations leading to sample variation
  • inbreeding is inversely proportional to population size
  • small population size: founder effect- bottlenecks, island populations
  • Random genetic drift
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Genetic Drift and Migration

A
  • efficiency of selection greater in Isolates
  • drift was possibly more important in prehistoric times when our species was broken up into hunting camps, tribes and clans
  • 10,000-100,000 years ago drift was more important than now because population was smaller
  • migration can reverse the effects of Drift on the ratio of Hom/Het
17
Q

Migration

A

-no migration; a population’s gene frequencies will be altered if there is immigration from another population with different gene frequencies; will increase frequency of Heterozygotes

18
Q

Races

A
  • race-is a geographically or culturally more-or-less isolated division whose gene pool differs from that of similar isolates
  • African non-African split occured about 140,000 years ago
  • causcasian asian split occured about 70,000 years ago
  • at the simplest level, each of us carries a set of genes that affects the color of his or her skin (often a surrogate for race). The exact number of genes isn’t known, but they represent only a small fraction of the estimated 20,000+ total genes in our genomes
19
Q

Genetic background

A
  • variation within race (85%) is greater than between races (6-10%)
  • two randomly chosen individuals are expected to differ at ~15,000,000 bases (of the 3,000,000,000)
  • CNV means that we differ from each other on average in copy number at 73-87 genes
  • we are 99.5% the same
  • the degree of diversity in humans is less than what typically exists among other species, due to a recent bottleneck
20
Q

Ethnic background

A
  • 3-30 races
  • ~700 ethnic groups
  • it can be useful to know a families’ racial/ethnic background, particularly in the multicultural US so as to give more accurate estimates of disease incidence, carrier frequencies, mutation frequencies
21
Q

Selection and Fitness

A
  • assume no selection, all genotypes equally viable i.e. no effects on fertility and viability leads to unequal contribution to the next generation
  • natural selection is the operation of forces that determine the relative fitness of the genotype in the population, thus affecting the frequency of the gene concerned

-s=coefficient of selection
f= genetic fitness (1-s)
-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, in relation to the average probability for the population

22
Q

Selection

A
  • dominant alleles are expressed in carriers i.e. are openly exposed; the consequences of selection are more obvious so they tend to be milder than recessives e.g. dominant lethals are removed straight away
  • selection against X-linked recessive versus autosomal recessive alleles is more efficient due to “exposure” in hemizygous males
  • selection against polygenic characters is less effective- new equilibrium will be established only gradually.
23
Q

MOI and exposure to selection

A
  • selection can remove dominants easier
  • AD- most exposed, only some non-penetrant
  • XLR- females 2/3 invisible since they are carriers, males 1/3
  • AR- q is exposed, 1-q is no exposed
24
Q

Heterozygous advantage

A
  • sickle cell anemia/plasmodium
  • Tay-Sachs heterzygotes maybe more resistant to TB
  • certain toxins produced in bacterial diarrhea cause oversecretion of chlorid; give CF heterozygotes an advantage in resistance to cholera
  • NOTE if heterozygous advantage of a particular genotype is present but unrecognized the mutation rate of the gene may be grossly overestimated. A relatively small selective advantage can outweigh a large disadvantage in the homozygote
25
Q

Mutation

A

mutation rate will alter allele frequencies very slowly- to change the frequency of an allele from 1.0 to 0.5 with u= 10^-5 would require 70,000 generations (1.4 million years)
-mutation rate- the rate of mutation per locus per generation or the rate per locus per gamete
-mutation is the only course of genetic variability but acting alone it has minimal effect on allele frequencies
~1 in 100 million base pairs per generation
Mutation rate higher on Y chromosome and on mitochondria

26
Q

New mutation rate

A

u= n/2N

  • where n=number of affected patients born to unaffected parents and N= total number of births. But difficulties in determining prevalence figures if variation in expression, penetrance, age-of-onse (die before manifesting e.g. HD) locus heterogeneity
  • asumes 100% penetrance and ascertainment
27
Q

Balance between mutation rate and selection

A
  • at equilibrium new mutations replace lost (removed by selection) disadvantageous alleles
  • for most autosomal recessive genes q=0.02 to 0.003, 2pq= 1/25 to 1/167
  • typical mean mutation rates u= 10^-6 to 10^-4
  • ~10% of individuals carry a new detrimental mutation
  • at equilibrium selection and mutant allele frequency at H-W
28
Q

Hemophilia- an example of change in selection with time

A
  • in early 1960s fitness was up due to transfusion
  • in late 1960s fitness was down due to hepatitis B contamination of blood supply
  • fitness was up due to Hep B vaccination
  • fitness down again due to Hep C
  • 1978 to 1983 fitness way down due to HIV and 30-90% of hemophilicas were HIV infected
  • fitness up due to screening and blood product treatment