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Biology 265 EVOLUTION

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Title: Biology 265 EVOLUTION


1
Biology 265EVOLUTION
  • Lecture 3

2
Overview
  • What is variation and how is it inherited?
  • Mendelian Genetics
  • Chromosome Theory of Heredity
  • DNA is genetic material
  • Structure of DNA
  • Causes of variation (sex, recombination, mutation)

3
Johann Gregor Mendel(1822-1884)
  • Experiments in Plant Hybridization (1865,1866)
  • Had read Darwins Origin of Species (1859) with
    interest
  • Saw no immediate connection
  • Nor did anyone else for decades

4
Who was that robed man?
  • A monk
  • Monastery of St. Thomas in Czech Republic
  • 1884 I am convinced that my scientific work
    will be appreciated before long by the whole
    world.

5
It took a while...
  • 1866 Ignored
  • 1900 Rediscovered by de Vries, Correns, and
    Tshermak
  • 1930 Haldane, Fisher and Sewell-Wright gt
    evolutionary synthesis
  • 1953 Watson and Crick gt modern genetics

6
Mendel liked peas
  • 1856 to 1861 he raised some 10,000 plants of
    varieties of the edible pea (Pisum sativum)
  • established true-breeding lines (always same type
    of offspring)
  • studied frequency of traits in hybrids

7
Mendel - Experiment 1
  • Mendel suspected that heredity depended on
    contributions from both parents
  • and that specific characteristics from each
    parent were passed on
  • rather than being blended together in the
    offspring.

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Mendels First Law
  • Principle of segregation
  • In the formation of gametes, the paired
    hereditary determinants separate (segregate) such
    that each gamete is equally likely to contain
    either one CHANCE

10
Mendels Second Law
  • The principle of independent assortment
  • Segregation of the members of any pair of alleles
    is independent of the segregation of other pairs
    in the formation of reproductive cells
  • (partly true)

11
Dominance
  • The spherical seed phenotype is observed with the
    genotypes "SS (homozygous) or "Ss"
    (heterozygous)
  • the character "spherical seed" is dominant and
    the character "wrinkled seed recessive.

12
Founder of genetics?
  • never seen or heard of chromosomes
  • he did not conceive of pairs of elements in the
    cell representing and determining the pairs of
    contrasted characters (Olby, 1979)
  • he did apply mathematics to heredity

13
THEODOR BOVERI (1862-1915)
  • WALTER STANBOROUGH SUTTON (1877-1916)
  • Described meiosis
  • Recognized link between chromosomes and Mendels
    factors

14
What is a chromosome?
  • a very long DNA molecule and associated proteins,
    that carry portions of the hereditary information
    of an organism

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Experimental Evolutionists
  • Aimed to recreate evolution in the lab
  • Controlled experiments
  • Analysis of variation
  • Where does variation come from and how is it
    inherited?
  • Rediscovered Mendels laws that offered
    statistical method for analyzing inheritance

18
THOMAS HUNT MORGAN (1866-1945)
  • chromosomal theory of heredity
  • genetic linkage
  • crossing over
  • non-disjunction

19
Morgans Fly Lab (1904)
  • genes in chromosomes
  • every chromosome many genes
  • there are chromosomes connected with sex
  • genes on one chromosome are inherited together
  • genes on different chromosomes are inherited
    separately

20
Morgans conclusions
  • Every form of a gene (allele) is located at the
    same place (locus) in each homologous chromosome.
  • Genes on the same chromosome are "linked" and are
    inherited together
  • unless crossing-over takes place
  • the frequency of crossing-over between alleles of
    two different genes is proportional to physical
    distance between them

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Recombination gt Variation
  • During meiosis, genetic material is exchanged
    between chromosomes by crossing over (metaphase
    I)
  • Recombination is one cause of variation

23
DNA is genetic material
  • 1928 Frederick Griffith
  • transformation of bacteria with material from
    dead bacteria
  • 1952 Hershey and Chase
  • 35S labels protein and was left outside bacterial
    cells with the empty viral coats
  • 32P labels DNA and entered the bacteria causing
    the production of new virus generations

24
But what was its structure
  • And why was that such a big deal?

25
The Double Helix
  • On the last day of February 1953, according to
    James Watson
  • Francis Crick announced to the patrons of the
    Eagle pub in Cambridge
  • "We have discovered the secret of life."

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ROSALIND E. FRANKLIN (1920-1958)
  • X-ray crystallography of DNA
  • Died before Nobel prize awarded

28
Watson, J. D. 1981The double helix a personal
account of the discovery of the structure of DNA.
London Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
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Replication
  • It has not escaped our notice that the specific
    base pairing we have postulated immediately
    suggests a copying mechanism for the genetic
    material. (Watson Crick, 1953)
  • Meselson and Stahl (1958) confirmed mechanism

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Variation - Mutation
  • During replication mistakes are made
  • Mistakes (copying errors) are corrected
  • But not always
  • Uncorrected errors during meiosis are passed on
    to offspring as mutations

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How does DNA control traits?
39
DNA carries the heredity factors - genes
  • Genes can be as short as 1000 base pairs or as
    long as several hundred thousand base pairs.
  • Humans have between 100,000 and 300,000 genes
    with at estimated 3 billion base pairs

40
Gene
  • a region of DNA that controls a hereditary
    characteristic.
  • It usually corresponds to a sequence used in the
    production of a specific protein

41
But how do genes control traits?
Its amazingly simple!!
42
Genetic Code
  • Har Khorana
  • Nirenberg Matthaei (1961)
  • Using radiolabelled amino acids and synthetic
    mRNA they decoded the genetic material

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Synthetic Theory of Evolution
  • Genetics supports natural selection
  • Pre-Mendel, it was thought that traits blended
    and were passed on as the new blended trait
  • Mendel showed that traits dont blend
  • They are inherited as discrete units
  • Genetic variation is not diluted, it is preserved
    for natural selection to act upon
  • Variation is produced by chance
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