1 / 46

how do we explain the patterns of variation observed in DNA sequences?

Molecular evolution: . how do we explain the patterns of variation observed in DNA sequences? how do we detect selection by comparing silent site substitutions to replacement substitutions?

ashtyn
Télécharger la présentation

how do we explain the patterns of variation observed in DNA sequences?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Molecular evolution: how do we explain the patterns of variation observed in DNA sequences? how do we detect selection by comparing silent site substitutions to replacement substitutions? how do we detect selection by comparing fixed differences between species to polymorphisms within species? how do we detect selection by using hitchhiking? Goal: understand the logic behind key tests.

  2. Neutralist vs. selectionist view Are most substitutions due to drift or natural selection? “Neutralist” vs. “selectionist” Agree that: Most mutations are deleterious and are removed. Some mutations are favourable and are fixed. Dispute: Are most replacement mutations that fix beneficial or neutral? Is observed polymorphism due to selection or drift?

  3. Reminder: substitution vs. polymorphism What happen after a mutation changes a nucleotide in a locus Polymorphism: mutant allele is one of several present in population Substitution: the mutant allele fixes in the population. (New mutations at other nucleotides may occur later.)

  4. Substitution schematic Individual 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Time 0: aaat aaat aaat aaat aaat aaat aaat Time 10: aaat aaat aaat aaat acat aaat aaat Time 20: aaat aaat acat aaat acat acat acat Time 30: acat acat acat acat acat acat acat Time 40: acat acat actt acat acat acat acat Times 10-29: polymorphism Time 30: mutation fixed -> substitution Time 40: new mutation: polymorphism

  5. Reminder: substitution rates for neutral mutations Most neutralmutations are lost Only 1 out of 2N fix Most that are lost go quickly (< 20 generations for population sizes from 100 - 2000) Most replacementmutations are lost since deleterious: rate of loss is faster than neutral

  6. Data in favor of neutrality • Substitutions in DNA appear to be clock-like Figure 6.21

  7. Drift model pseudocode Population with 2N – 1 copies of allele A, 1 of allele a For each generation, draw from prior generation alleles. -> generate a random number. If less than f(A), new allele = A. Otherwise, allele = a. -> repeat until 2N alleles drawn Check to see outcome of drift ->If a is lost, start over. ->If a has fixed, note the number of years ->Otherwise, next year with the new allele frequencies Repeat 100x per population size Test populations of 100, 500, 1000, 1500, and 2000

  8. Times to fix for neutral alleles(Only 1/2N fix: how long do they take?) Estimated formula: fixation time = 4.07 * N – 57 Theoretical formula: fixation time = 4N

  9. Expected pattern Actual pattern rabbits rabbits Substitutions Substitutions elephants elephants Years Years Puzzle for neutrality • Rates of substitution are clock-like per year, not per generation.

  10. Revised theory: the nearly – neutral theory Figure 6.22

  11. Can we distinguish selection from drift using sequence data? • Compare two species: infer where substitutions have occurred. • Silent site substitutions should be neutral (dS) • Non-synonymous substitutions are expected to be deleterious (usually) (dN) • so, expect < 1 Translation: rate of non-synonymous (dN) is less than the rate of synonymous substitutions (dS)

  12. and inferences about selection < 1: replacements are deleterious = 1: replacements are neutral > 1: replacements are beneficial

  13. What happens to fixation time with selection? Model pseudocode Population with 2N – 1 copies of allele A, 1 of allele a WA = 1 + s; Wa = 1 For each generation, draw from prior generation alleles. -> generate a random number. If greater than f(A), new alleel = a. Otherwise, test fitness: if random < WA, new allele = A. -> repeat until 2N alleles drawn Check to see outcome of drift ->If a is lost, start over. ->If a has fixed, note the number of years ->Otherwise, next year with the new allele frequencies Repeat 100x per fitness Test populations of 100

  14. Time to fix favourable allele

  15. Time to fix: neutral vs. favourable Simulation results: black – neutral mutations; red – favourable mutations

  16. Time to fixation: drift is slow Neutral: New mutations per generation: 2Neu Probability of fixing a new mutation: 1 / 2Ne Fixations per generation: = 2Neu * 1 / 2Ne = u Time to fix: 4Ne Favored by selection New mutations per generation: 2Neu (but how many favourable??) Favored mutation probability of fixing: 2|s| Fixations per generation: 2Neu * 2|s| * prob. favourable Time to fix: 2 ln (2Ne) / |s| 2 ln (2Ne) / |s| << 4Ne Shorter time to fixation Derivations of these results are tough! See Kimura (1962) and Kimutra and Ohta (1969).

  17. Time to fixation: favourable and neutral

  18. dN / dS data: BRCA1 > 1 < 1 Figure 6.21

  19. Molecular evidence of selection II: McDonald-Kreitman Test is very conservative: many selective events may be missed. Example: immunoglobins. = 0.37 overall We suspect selection favoring new combinations at key sites. Antigen recognition sites: > 3.0

  20. Evidence of selection II: McDonald-Kreitman test v v

  21. McDonald-Kreitman test III If evolution of protein is neutral, the percentage of mutations that alter amino acids should be the same along any branch If all mutations are neutral, all should have the same probability of persisting So: dN / dS among polymorphisms should be the same as within fixed differences

  22. McDonald-Kreitman logic • Silent sites - always neutral - fix slowly - contribute to polymorphism • Replacement sites • mainly unfavourable • if neutral, fix at same rate as silent and contribute to polymorphism • proportion of replacement mutations that are neutral determines dN / dS for polymorphism • if favourable, fix quickly and do not contribute to polymorphism: higher dN / dS for fixed differences, lower rate for polymorphism

  23. Time to fixation: favourable and neutral

  24. Polymorphism and fixation Neutral Deleterious Silent Replacement 1 / 2N neutral mutations fix

  25. Polymorphism and fixation Neutral Deleterious Favourable Silent Replacement 1 / 2N neutral mutations fix - slow 2|s| fix -fast Neutral Favourable

  26. dN / dS for neutral and favourable Neutral Favourable Polymorphism dN dN dS dS Fixation dN dN dS dS = < poly fixed poly fixed

  27. McDonald-Kreitman hypotheses H0: All mutations are neutral. Then, dN / dS for polymorphic sites should equal dN / dS for fixed differences H1: replacements are favoured. Favoured mutations fix rapidly, so dN / dS for polymorphic < dN / dS fixed

  28. Example of MK test: ADH in Drosophilia Compare sequences of D. simulans and D. yakuba for ADH (alcohol dehydrogenase) Significance? Use χ2 test for independence

  29. Evidence of selection III: selective sweeps • Imagine a new mutation that is strongly favored (e.g. insecticide resistance in mosquitoes)

  30. Detecting selection using linkage: G6PD in humans Natural history: • Located on X chromosome • encodes glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase • Red blood cells lack mitochondria • Glycolysis only • NADPH only via pentose-phosphate shunt –requires G6PD • NADPH needed for glutathione, which protects against oxidation

  31. G6PD and malaria • Malaria (Plasmodium falciparum) infects red blood cells • Has limited G6PD function typically (but can produce the enzyme) • Uses NADPH from red blood cell • In G6PD deficient individuals?

  32. G6PD mutants • Different mutants result in different levels of enzymatic activity • Severe mutants result in destruction of red blood cells and anemia • Most common mutant: G6PD-202A • Usually mild effects: may increase risk of miscarriage • Prediction: G6PD and malaria?

  33. Frequency of G6PD deficiency

  34. Has G6PD-202A been selected? • 14 markers up to 413,000 bp from G6PD • LD? • Long distance LD implies strong, recent selection

  35. Has G6PD-202A been selected? Fig 7.14 Linkage disquilibrium kb from core region

  36. Alternative hypothesis: drift caused linkage disequilibrium G6PD-202A Allele frequency Figure 7.14b

  37. Detecting selection II: CCR532

  38. Detecting selection II: CCR5Δ32 • Stephens (1998) found strong disequilibrium between CCR5-Δ32 and nearby markers • Implies recent origin (< 2000 years): recombination breaks down linkage • Implies selected

  39. Detecting selection II: CCR5Δ32 • But: new data – November 2005. • Better map:

  40. Detecting selection: summary • Several approaches to detecting selection • dN / dS • McDonald-Kreitman test • using hitchhiking Challenges of each method?

  41. Other uses of molecular data: the coalescent Any two alleles in a population share a common ancestor in the last generation 1 / 2Ne Therefore, going backwards in time, the expected time to find the common ancestor is 1 / (1 / 2Ne) = 2Ne

  42. Coalescent II

  43. Coalescent and sequences Imagine that you have two sequences at a locus. They shared a common ancestor 2Ne generations ago. They accumulate mutations at rate u per generation per basepair. 2Ne generations / lineage * 2 lineages * u = 4Neu differences per basepair between the two sequences.

  44. Coalescent example We sequence 1000 base pairs from two sequences, and find 16 base pair differences, how large is the population/ Assume u = 2 x 10-8. 4Neu * 1000 = 16; 8 x 10-5 * Ne = 16; Ne * 10-5 = 2; Ne = 200,000

  45. Neutral theory as a null model

  46. Additional readings Eyre-Walker (2006) The genomic rate of adaptive evolution. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 29:569-575. (Well-written review) Gillespie (2004). Population genetics: a concise guide. John Hopkins: Baltimore, MD. (Very short, clear, but dense!) Graur and Li (2000) Fundamentals of molecular evolution. Sinauer: Sunderland, MA. (Very clear) Kimura (1962) On the probability of fixation of mutant genes in populations. Genetics 47:713-719. (If you really want the derivation) Kimura and Ohta (1969) The average number of generations until fixation of a mutant gene in a finite population. Genetics 61:763-771. (If you really want the derivation) Sabeti et al (2006) The case for selection at CCR5-32. PLoS Biology 3:1963-1969. Questions: 1. Explain why clock-like rates of substitutions per year did not fit with the neutral theory. See posted molecular evolution practice questions: highly recommended!

More Related