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Genetics: The source of variability for evolution

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Title: Hemoglobin: Structure Author: Preferred Customer Last modified by: Mark Liberman Created Date: 9/11/1998 4:28:45 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Genetics: The source of variability for evolution


1
Genetics The source of variability for evolution
  • How population survival strategies determine
    human biology and provides the basic background
    for human variation

2
Diversity of form and function
  • The basis of evolution is variation
  • But, where does variability in biological form
    and function come from?
  • There are two levels of evolution we will be
    interested in
  • Macro-level evolutionary change, the appearance
    of new species, and
  • Micro-level evolutionary change, the generation
    by generation changes in the genes of
    populations.

3
What does the genetic material do, anyway?
  • The genetic material has a number of important
    functions
  • 1. Transmit genetic information from one
    generation to the next (humans produce human
    infants and not rats or elephants).
  • 2. Since every cell in the body (with several
    exceptions) has more or less the same genetic
    material as the original cell (the fertilized
    egg), the genetic material must be able to
    reproduce itself when new cells are produced
    during growth and development as well as normal
    body maintenance.
  • 3. The genetic materials are organized around
    a sequence of chemical bases that encode for
    the synthesis of proteins, a huge class of
    chemicals that perform a wide range of functions
    in the body.

4
What determines cell structure and function?
  • Proteins that are expressed
  • Unique expression by cell type
  • How is this controlled?
  • Look to the cell nucleus

5
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6
Chromosomes
  • Carries information as part of their structure
  • Namecolored bodies when stained and seen
    microscopically
  • Species-specific number in each cell nucleus,
    with the chromosome number usually expressed in
    pairs (the complexity of the living thing is not
    reflected in the chromosome number (chimps, for
    example, have more chromosomes than humans).

7
Human chromosomes
  • Species specific number46
  • 23 pairs of chromosomes
  • Specifially
  • 22 pairs of autosomes
  • or, homologous chromosomes
  • 1 pair of sex chromosomes
  • XX female
  • XY male
  • Question Why are there pairs of chromosomes?

8
Where do the chromosomes come from?
  • We are originally one cell
  • 23 of maternal origin
  • ova carry these
  • 23 of paternal origin
  • sperm carry these
  • If every cell has 46, how do these end up with
    only 23 and why?

9
Meiosis
  • How many of you remember the process of meiosis
    well enough to explain it to your classmates?

10
Meiosis
11
If we start out as one cell, how do we get so big
and complicated?
  • BIG
  • cell division
  • (Mitosis)
  • Complicated
  • cell differentiation

12
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13
Mitosis
  • Cell Division
  • Chromosomal Replication

14
Differentiation
  • Unique proteins in different cell types

15
Proteins What are they?
  • You are what you eat!
  • Functions include
  • Structure
  • Transport
  • Immune
  • Function reflects their structure
  • Proteins have 3 dimensional structure
  • Folded chains

16
Proteins Structural specifics
  • Structure
  • Three dimensional
  • Folded chain
  • Polypeptide chain
  • of amino acids (aa)
  • 20 common aa
  • Different proteins have different aa sequences

17
Amino acids What are they and where do they come
from?
  • Chemical group based on their composition an
    amine and an acid
  • Of the 20 common aa,
  • 10 the body can make
  • 10 must be eaten
  • (essential aa)
  • Glycine (gly) Glutamic acid (glu)
  • Alanine (ala) Aspartic acid (asp)
  • Valine (val) Isoleucine (Ile)
  • Leucine (leu) Serine (ser)
  • Threonine (thr) Proline (pro)
  • Lysine (lys) Arginine (arg)
  • Glutamine (gln) Aspargine (asn)
  • Methionine (met) Cysteine (cys)
  • Tryptophan(trp) Tyrosine (tyr)
  • Histidine (his) Phenylalanine(phe)

18
Proteins How they are made 1. From amino acids
  • Polypeptide chainsaa
  • Sequence of aa crucial to structure, and thus
    function
  • Sequence determined by series of nucleic acids
    and the genetic code
  • Determined by a gene

met
val
his
leu
thr
asp
ala
glu
lys
ala
ala
val
ss
cys
leu
trp
gly
lys
val
asn
ser
asp
glu
19
What is a gene?
  • A recipe for a protein
  • Located at a specific region (locus) on a
    specific chromosome
  • Implications
  • different chromosomes carry different information
  • Question
  • do homologous chromosomes carry the same
    information?

20
A gene up-close is a coding sequence of DNA
  • The relationship between chromosomes and DNA
  • Chromosomes are packaged DNA

21
DNA
  • Double helix structure
  • Biochemically
  • Deoxyribose sugar
  • Nucleic Acids
  • purines adenine, guanine
  • pyrimidines thymine, cytosine
  • Base pair rules
  • c g
  • a t

22
Base pair rules illustrated DNA self-replication
23
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29
Genes and their protein productsHow does a
gene code for a protein?What is the process
by which the structure of DNA determines the
structure of a protein?
  • For example, how is a piece of coding DNA
    translated?
  • CCTGAGGAG
  • GGACTCCTC

30
The genetic code
  • 1. Only one strand of DNA is the recipe, or
    code
  • The genetic code
  • three sequential nucleic acids specify an
    amino acid
  • DNA CAAGTAGAATGCGGACTTCTT
  • AA val his leu thr pro glu glu

31
Code to Protein Shuttle system
  • A messenger transmits DNA sequence to protein
    assembly site
  • messenger RNA (Ribose Nucleic Acid)
  • distinct from DNA single strand C G A Uracil
  • self-assembles as it reads the DNA by base-pair
    rules
  • goes to ribosome, site of protein assembly

32
Translate this DNA into mRNA
  • CAAGTAGAATGCGGACTTCTT
  • A. GTTCATCTTACGCCTGAAGAA
  • B. GUUCAUCUUACGCCUGAAGAA

33
The genetic code codons
  • mRNA GUUCAUCUUACGCCUGAAGAA
  • GUU CAU CUU ACG CCU GAA GAA

34
M-RNA strand to protein
  • Mirror image of DNA
  • Identifies a sequence of amino acids, and thus a
    protein
  • HOW Are amino acids gathered together in the
    correct sequence?
  • The genetic code
  • A TRANSLATOR molecule
  • t-RNA

Amino Acid
3NA

35
m-RNA meets t-RNApolypeptide chain of amino
acids built
  • mRNAGUUCAUCUUACGCCUGAAGAAAAG
  • GUU CAU CUU ACG CCU GAA GAA AAG

caa
gua
gaa
ugc
gga
cuu
cuu
uuc






leu
thr
pro
lys
val
his
glu
glu
Beta Globin (146 aa)
36
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37
Case Study Genetics in action at the level of
the population
  • Case study SCA
  • Background
  • 1912 James Herrick
  • Case Report
  • Blood smear analysis
  • 1940s family studies
  • Mendelian genetics

38
Proteins Structural specifics
  • Structure
  • Three dimensional
  • Folded chain
  • Polypeptide chain
  • of amino acids (aa)
  • 20 common aa
  • Different proteins have different aa sequences

39
Red Blood Cells What do they do?
  • Origin in bone marrow
  • 120 day life cycle
  • Oxygen-carriers
  • Pick up oxygen in lungs
  • Deliver oxygen to body tissues
  • By what mechanism?

Rbcsinblood on top half alvertonoutpouch on bottom
40
A Protein!Hemoglobin Function
  • In red blood cells
  • Transport protein
  • Carries oxygen
  • How?

41
The function depends on structure How
hemoglobin works
  • Three dimensional
  • Four components
  • Two alpha chains
  • chromosome 16
  • Two beta chains
  • chromosome 11
  • Red marks the spot!
  • Where oxygen binds
  • Iron ion critical here
  • Hemoglobin Structure

42
Sickle Cell Anemia
  • Sickle Cell
  • red blood cell shape
  • Anemia
  • poor oxygen delivery
  • Cause
  • abnormal hemoglobin
  • A genetic disease

43
What causes the sickling?
  • Hemoglobin molecule changes shape
  • Results in distortion of rbc
  • Functional effects?

44
Why does the hemoglobin do this?
  • WHEN Abnormal hemoglobin molecule unstable under
    conditions of low oxygen, high acidity
  • HOW Crystalline
  • structure results
  • WHY? Structural instability

45
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46
Hemoglobin S vs Hemoglobin A(Sickle S vs
Normal A)
  • First 6 amino acids
  • Beta globin gene
  • 146 amino acids
  • Hbs beta globin chain
  • one different amino acid
  • valine replaces glutamic acid at position 6

Valine
Valine
Histidine
Histidine
Leucine
Leucine
Threonine
Threonine
Proline
Proline
Glutamic acid
Valine
A
S
47
One nucleic acid apart
  • DNA
  • HbA GGACTTCTT
  • HbS GGACATCTT

Genetic
Pro
Glu
Glu
Mutation
Pro
Val
Glu
48
Population Frequency of HbS

Heterozygote vs Homozygote?
  • Africa
  • In some places, 1 in 5 people are carriers, or
  • HbS/HbA genotype, or heterozygous
    (heterodifferent)
  • A co-dominant trait
  • both proteins are expressed

Dominant vs recessive?
49
Review
  • At each locus, there are two genes they are
    either the same or different. This illustrates
    allelic variability
  • Homozygote
  • Heterozygote
  • Dominant
  • Recessive

50
HbS and adaptation
  • In a population of 100 individuals, calculate the
    number of HbS and HbA genes if 20 of the people
    are heterozygotic and the rest are homozygotic
    normal.
  • What is the percentage of HbS and HbA genes in
    the population?
  • Why do you think there are no HbS/HbS
    individuals?

51
Genes vs genotype
  • In 100 individuals
  • genotype genes
  • 20 are HbS/HbA 20 HbS 20 HbA
  • 80 are HbA/HbA 160 HbA
  • 20 HbS 180
    HbA
  • 20/200 10 HbS and 180/20090 HbA

52
Why is the frequency of HbS high in some
populations?
53
Malaria
  • Disease caused by
  • Mosquito-borne
  • Parasite
  • Plasmodium
  • Illness
  • fever
  • rigor
  • sweats
  • High mortality
  • very high in infants and children
  • Who survives?

54
Malarial Illness and Parasite
  • Illness intensity related to parasite density
  • Fewer parasites, less ill
  • Mechanisms to decrease parasites
  • kill mosquitoes (DDT)
  • interrupt parasite lifecycle (anti-malarial
    drugs)
  • change the micro-environment of the parasite in
    the body
  • parasite needs oxygen

55
How to make the body inhospitable for the
parasite and increase the likelihood of
individual humans survival
  • Decrease available oxygen to parasite
  • Within limits set by the survivability of the
    host
  • Red blood cell biochemistry

56
Malaria in Africa
  • Symptoms
  • fever, rigor, sweats
  • Disease organism
  • Parasite Plasmodium falciparum
  • gambia
  • vivax
  • malariae
  • Vector Mosquito
  • Anopheles gambiae vs
  • Anopheles funestus

57
Natural Selection and the introduction of a new
agricultural technique
  • Anopheles funestus populations
  • The possibility for parasite-human contact
  • People contract malaria, high mortality follows
  • Who survives?

58
Mutants
  • Individuals with traits that are adaptive in the
    face of parasites
  • In central Africa, HbS/HbA individuals
  • Parasites use host oxygen, causing conditions
    resulting in sickling of red blood cells
  • Anemia is detrimental to parasite survival
  • Parasite numbers decrease, individual improves

59
An example of natural selection
60
Malaria-Sickle Cell Anemia
  • In summary
  • Human cultural behavior (agriculture)
  • Ecosystem change
  • Malaria
  • Selection for originally rare mutation in
    hemoglobin selection favored the heterozygote
  • Specifically, balanced selection occurred
  • 1. People with normal hemoglobin (HbA/HbA) died
    of malaria
  • 2. People with only abnormal hemoglobin (HbS/HbS)
    died of anemia
  • 3. Individuals with HbS/HbA genotype lived to
    reproduce
  • This is an example of differential
    reproduction/differential mortality

61
Many solutions to the malaria problem
  • In Southeast Asia, the disease thalassemia
    represents a similar outcome of selection for
    hemoglobin variants
  • In the Mediterranean, other red blood cell enzyme
    errors
  • The heterozygote had the advantage

62
To consider
  • How is it possible that there are these diverse
    solutions to the same problem?
  • How would you expect the gene frequency of the
    HbS gene in the United States today to
    compare with what it was two centuries ago?

63
Many ways to make the body inhospitable to the
parasite
  • Red blood cell biochemistry

64
Populations gene pools unique and adaptive
  • Reflect reproductive success in local
    environments
  • Small, isolated populations
  • Different random mutations may become successful
    by chance
  • This reflects genetic drift

65
How are new genes introduced into populations?
  • By people!
  • Migration into and out of populations people
    take their genes with them
  • This is an example of gene flow
  • For example, the relative frequency of HbS in the
    populations of African descent in the United
    States has decreased in the past two centuries as
    a result of intermixture with other populations.

66
Concepts you should know and understand after our
discussions I. Basic Genetics
  • The differences between chromosomes, gene, allele
  • How cell division occurs
  • Meiosis
  • DNA, RNA and the process of protein synthesis
  • How mutations, recombination, translocation
    effect this
  • Codon
  • The relationship between nucleic acid, amino
    acid, protein
  • The human karyotype autosomes, sex chromosomes

67
Concepts you should know and understand after our
discussions II. How genetics works in populations
  • The specific case of sickle cell anemia
  • An example of a mutation that became advantageous
    to a population
  • The specifics of the mutation, the structure and
    function of hemoglobin, how it affects the red
    blood cell, and the effects for the individual
  • The selective pressure of malaria
  • The nature of the disease, the organism that
    causes it, how it is contracted by people how
    they survive it.
  • Why did malaria and sickle cell anemia evolve
    together in a human population?
  • An example of balanced selection
  • How genetic mutation, natural selection, genetic
    drift and gene flow effect a populations gene
    pool

68
Genetics and the evolution of human diversity
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