Term
What are the 3 enzymes in HIV |
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Definition
reverse transcriptase, integrase and protease |
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Term
Describe the immune response |
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Definition
Regulatory T cells regulate, dendritic cells present viral protein to naive helper T cells which divide into memory T cells and Effector T cells . Effector t cells stimulate B cells to mature into plasma cells that produce antibodies Effector T cells also stimulate macrophages to ingest infected cells and activate naive killer T cells which become effector Killer T cells and memory killer T cells |
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Term
describe compensatory evolution with AZT |
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Definition
compensatory evolution makes resistant forms more efficient with longer exposure to the drug (AZT) |
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Term
TRUE OR FALSE: during the AIDS phase of HIV there is the most divergence in the gp120 binding site gene |
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Definition
FALSE: there is little immune system challenges during the AIDS phase, however during the CHRONIC phase there is rapid evolutionary change from pressure of immune system challenge for virions to evolve novel eptitopes and evade immune system |
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Term
what are the reasons the HIV retrovirus evolves so fast?? |
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Definition
1) many thousands of generations of HIV in victim 2) RT is so error prone (~50% of transcripts are mutated) 3) rapid generation time |
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Term
what is in an HIV drug cocktail? |
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Definition
RT inhibitors: mimic nucleotides or block active site protease inhibitors: dont let protease cleave viral precursor proteins fusion inhibitors: dont let HIV enter host cell (interfere with gp120s in virus) integrase inhibitors: bloack insertiong of HIV DNA into host genome |
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Term
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Definition
highly active anti retroviral therapy (cocktails of TR,protease,fusion and integrase inhibitors) |
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Term
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Definition
1) burns through hosts supply of naive and memory t cells 2) population in host evolves to be more aggressive 3) strains of HIV evolves that can infect naive T cells (progenitors of memory and effector T cells) |
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Term
what does the evolution of HIV strains that use CXCR4 show? |
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Definition
the short-sighted nature of HIV evolution because these strains cannot be transmitted to new hosts. |
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Term
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Definition
1) evolution does not plan ahead 2) Virulence (all hosts die, the virus has to colonize new hosts) |
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Term
what affects the fitness of the virion? |
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Definition
1) intrahost success x 2) interhost transmission 1) traits that predispose HIV to kill also enhance ability to infect new hosts 2) benign strains of HIV are transmitted from host ot host at low rates |
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Term
when are intrahost sucess and interhost transmission negatively correlated? and positively? |
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Definition
when hosts are rare are transmissibility is correlated with repeated exposure when hosts are common and transmissability is correlated with virulence |
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Term
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Definition
got malaria in the congo -interested in the idea that people picked up the disease thru contamination of the polio vaccine by vaccines being grown in monkey liver but this is not supported by the evolutionary trees |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
why cant we make AIDS vaccines? |
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Definition
there are many different strains of HIV, strains have jumped from primates, diversified and will probably continue to do so --> evolution is too rapid |
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Term
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Definition
rudimentary or degenerate body parts in a species that have a function in close relative are suggestive of common ancestry and an evolutionary process |
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Term
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Definition
modern organisms tend to be more similar to extinct ones found as fossils in the same place than those found in other places |
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Term
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Definition
evolutionary change over a short period |
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Term
where did all dogs come from? |
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Definition
10 thousand YA from Asian Grey Wolf |
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Term
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Definition
can be changed dramatically by selection |
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Term
what is higher oil content of corn an example of? |
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Definition
sustained selection (artificial selection) |
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Term
what does the sliding jello refer to? |
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Definition
increasing a trait beyond the standing variation from the ancestor |
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Term
where does variation come from? |
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Definition
1) mutation 2) recombination 2) expression of hidden variation |
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Term
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Definition
1) there is variation in populations 2) part of this variation is heritible 3) variation influences FITNESS: some individuals are more succesful in survival and reproduction than others |
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Term
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Definition
codiscovered the principle |
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Term
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Definition
divergence of a clade into populations, adapted to many different ecological niches |
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Term
Prerequisites for selection |
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Definition
1. Genetic variation in the population in a trait is related to fitness 2. Agent of selection |
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Term
2 approaches to finding out if variation is hertible |
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Definition
1) similarity between relatives 2) response to selection |
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Term
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Definition
the proportion of variation observed in a population that is due to variation in genes (varies b/n 0 and 1) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
how to measure heritability |
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Definition
basic QG: measure the correlation between the offspring and parents plot graph of offspring vs. mid-parent value Degree to positive correlation is suggestive of greater genetic effect |
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Term
problems with heritability |
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Definition
1) maternal effects 2) conspecific nest parasitism 3) misidentified paternity 4) shared environments |
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Term
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Definition
due to differences in nutrient stores or hormonal contents of eggs avoid: estimate heritability from father+ offspring |
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Term
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Definition
correlation due to shared environment inflates estimate of heritability |
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Term
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Definition
socially monogamous species sometimes have extrapair copulation, reduces estimate of heritability |
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Term
conspecific nest parasitism |
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Definition
females sneak into anothers nest to lay eggs, reduces estimate of heritability |
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Term
is having 2 eyes heritable or inherited ? why? |
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Definition
is it genetically based so it is inherited but there is so variation therefore no heritability |
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Term
TRUE OR FALSE: life history STRONGER heritability than morphological because they are linked to fitness |
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Definition
FALSE: the closer a trait is to fitness, the less Vg we expect because there is less genetic contribution because selection is relentlessly operating on these traits |
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Term
Bigger isn’t always better. why? |
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Definition
1. May be poorer at manipulating smaller objects 2. More energetically expensive to produces 3. Affects vocal communication, other aspects of mate choice (Sexual selection) 4. Genetically correlated with other traits also under selection? |
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Term
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Definition
1. Evolution can occur very rapidly and dramatically 2. Sources of natural selection often shift, so evolution reverses itself or takes new directions 3. The see-saw of selection in changing environments may give the impression of stately gradual change |
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Term
Bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4) |
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Definition
found to be linked to outgrowth and shaping of beak -Calmodulin interacts with BMP4 to define size & shape |
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Term
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Definition
= (ln X2 – ln X1)/million years |
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Term
Adding predator to low predation site you predict |
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Definition
Decrease in age and size at reproduction Loss of bright colouration |
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Term
Migration (gene flow) between locally adapting populations is also a _________ force |
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Definition
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Term
what are the 2 types of selection on viruses? |
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Definition
1) selection of different virus strains within one host 2) selection of strains that are able to transmit from host to host |
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Term
when will evolution occur |
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Definition
1) population varys 2) and reproduces 3) variance is heritable 4) there is a selection pressure that causes a difference in survival and reproduction so that certain heritable ways leave more offspring |
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Term
which two traits are linked in HIV ? |
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Definition
virulence and transmission-appear to be linked: HIV-2 has lower viral load (number of virus particles in blood and bodily secretions), which lowers virulence but also apparently lowers transmission rate to new hosts. |
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Term
why is HIV fatal? (3 hypothesis) |
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Definition
(1) Short-sighted evolution: Within each patient, competition between HIV virions results in evolution of HIV strains that are more aggressive, replicate more rapidly, and can evade attack by that host's T cells. This evolution is not to the virus' long-term benefit, however, because it ultimately kills the host-and kills all virions within that host. (2) Evolution for transmission to new hosts: Traits such as high viral load that can cause high virulence may also allow HIV to spread to new hosts. (3) Host has not had time to counterevolve: HIV is a new disease for humans, and our species has not yet had time to evolve defenses. We are still within the first generation of humans to be exposed to HIV. |
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Term
why is the evidence for evolution? |
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Definition
1. evidence from living species a) direct observation of change thru time (soapberry bugs) b) vestigial organs 2. evidence from the fossil record a) fact of extinction b) law of sucession c) transitional forms 3. evidence of descent with modification 4. evidence of common ancestry a) ring species b) homology c) relationships among species 5. the age of the earth |
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Term
evidence from living species of evolution? |
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Definition
a) direct observation of change thru time (soapberry bugs) b) vestigial organs |
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Term
2. evidence from the fossil record of evolution? |
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Definition
a) fact of extinction b) law of sucession c) transitional forms |
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Term
soapberry bugs getting longer beaks and birds evolving from dinos are examples of ______ ___ __________ |
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Definition
3. evidence of descent with modification |
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Term
4. evidence of common ancestry in evolution ? |
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Definition
a) ring species b) homology c) relationships among species |
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Term
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Definition
trait that has developed via natural selection over many generations in terms of relative reproductive fitness, |
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Term
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Definition
variation exists, the variation is heritable, survival & reproduction are not equal, and survival and reproduction are not random. |
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Term
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Definition
selection of a trait that is detrimental to the individual carrying the trait, but that is favorable to other members in the group. |
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Term
3 objections to darwins th |
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Definition
Three major objections to Darwin's theory were: there is not enough variability for evolution to continue for very long; new traits would disappear by "blending" with other traits; and, the earth's temperature implies that the earth is too young for evolution to have occurred. |
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Term
3 objections to darwins th |
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Definition
Three major objections to Darwin's theory were: there is not enough variability for evolution to continue for very long; new traits would disappear by "blending" with other traits; and, the earth's temperature implies that the earth is too young for evolution to have occurred. |
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Term
what is the sesamoid thumb of the panda an example of? |
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Definition
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Term
if boostrap support for a particular branch is less that 0.5, what will the research do? |
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Definition
conclude the branching pattern is uncertain in that part of the tree and collapse the branch into a polytomy (point of uncertainty) |
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Term
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Definition
duplicated genes found in the same genome; describes the relationship among members of the same gene family ( a type of genetic homology) |
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Term
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Definition
DNA sequences that are homologous to functioning genes but are not transcribed |
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Term
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Definition
genes that diverged after a speciation event; describes the relationship among homologous genes found in different species. |
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Term
difference between orthologous and paralogous |
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Definition
Orthologous genes diverge by speciation events, whereas paralogous genes are the result of gene duplication. |
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Term
what kind of force in migration |
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Definition
migration= gene flow so its a homogenizing force |
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Term
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Definition
speciation over very small distances – mate choice |
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Term
what does selection change in a population? |
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Definition
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Term
selection acts upon ____ of ______ but evolution only occurs when it acts upon _________ |
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Definition
1. phenotypes 2. individuals 3. heritable variation |
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Term
what iis the result of over specialization? |
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Definition
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Term
what are two examples that show selection is not progressive? |
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Definition
vestigial organs and parasites that de-evolve free living structures |
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Term
why is survival of the fittest not a tautology? |
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Definition
because fitness is an HERITABLE estimable and objective entity related to survival and reproductive success of variants that can be inherited. |
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Term
characters that are coopted for new purposes are called? |
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Definition
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Term
van valen called the evolution/counter evolution between species what? |
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Definition
the red queen principle, competitors are always getting better too |
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Term
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Definition
allows slower growing organisms to stay a little bit ahead of parasites etc. |
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Term
what maintains variation for fitness? |
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Definition
1)Mutation: ultimate soure of variation 2)Diploidy – recessive traits “hidden” 3)Fluctuating selection pressure over time (or space) 4)Trade offs: improvement in one character results in loss of another 5)Disruptive selection: Over space, time, use of different elements of habitat 6)Immigration and spatial variation – mixing genes between populations |
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Term
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Definition
how many grand kids does this individual produce? |
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Term
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Definition
organism has best phenotype already and selection is removing the outer bounds, pushing the population to everyone being intermediate – average is best |
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Term
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Definition
selection is moving in two different directions simultaneously |
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Term
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Definition
individuals moving towards another trait |
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Term
what is the problem with blending? |
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Definition
doest provide for genetic variation |
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Term
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Definition
genotype frequencies and gene frequencies of a LARGE, RANDOMLY breeding population remain constant provided that MUTATION, IMMIGRATION and SELECTION don't take place |
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Term
science and culture discovery institute |
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Definition
supports research by scientists for intelligent design |
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Term
flagella counter argument |
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Definition
homologous proteins of Yersinia bacteria has pointy spine that doesnt actually move |
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Term
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Definition
showed a phylogeny started from one cell of e.coli |
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Term
findings from the e.coli experiment |
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Definition
1) new beneficial mutations are frequent enough to fuel rapid adaptive change in e.coli 2) population structure can be complicated when multiple beneficial mutations arise in different genotypes 3) "mutator" genotypes were favored later in the selection response 4) historical contingency may be important to the evolution of novelty |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
what happened with the cit e.coli ? |
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Definition
earlier mutation events "potentiated" the genome of A3 making mutation to cit+ far more likely |
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Term
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Definition
1) competition: compare to see which survives best under limited conditions 2) intinsic rate of increase: how many progeny |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
TRUE OR FALSE: not all synapomophies are homolgous |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
synapamorphy of the tetrapods |
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Term
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Definition
classifying things based on common ancestry |
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Term
true or false: humans evolved from chimps |
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Definition
false, they have a shared common ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
based on which characteristics do whales belong to which group? |
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Definition
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Term
cladistic analysis vs phenetic |
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Definition
cladistic looks at groups by indivdual synapamorphies but phenetic looks at % synapamorphy and throws out individual ones cladistic uses principle of MONOPHYLY, all descendants of a common ancestor are part of a clade and groups that dont include some descendants are paraphyletic PHENTIC approaches stress MORPHOLOGICAL similarity PHYLOGENETIC approaches stress COMMON ANCESTRY |
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Term
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Definition
lowest number of branches, simplest model wins |
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Term
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Definition
algorithm evaluates many possible trees, calculates probability of obtaining particular data given a model of change |
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Term
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Definition
similar to ML, different statistical principle |
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Term
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Definition
discrete traits used to infer a quantitative degree of differentiation implies a model of change easiest to imagine with molecular clock |
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Term
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Definition
early mamle linked to whales phylogeny places whales within artiodactyls, but not close to hippos hippos have recent orgin in fossil record (~7MYA) but whales date back to 50MYA |
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Term
indohyous synapomorphies with whales |
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Definition
bone density ear morphology |
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Term
advantages and disadvantages of molecular data |
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Definition
adv: less likely to contain homoplasy due to convergent evolution, thousands of characters can be used through the genome (which is getting cheaper), many mutations occur in DNA that arent in phenotype, you can use models to account for probability disadv: the mutation rate varies from gene to gene and there are only 4 bases so reversals occur and homoplasy difficult to reconize |
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Term
whales were traditionally considered to be an order within ____ |
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Definition
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Term
molecular clocks assumption 3 problems |
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Definition
that all molecules change at a consistent predictable rate 1)different parts of a codon are expected to change at different rates 2) loci will vary by functional significance 3) organisms vary in generation time |
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Term
transition beween fish and modern reptiles |
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Definition
panderichitis and tiktaalik |
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Term
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Definition
small (less than 5%) and have few deleterious effects |
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Term
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Definition
disproportionately stronger selection against multiple mutants |
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Term
DNA polymerase aries what? |
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Definition
heritably in error rate, leading to variation in u |
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Term
reasons mutation can be adaptive |
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Definition
1) asexual bacteria require mutation for evolutionary change 2) DNA polymerase varies heritably in error rate (higher u) 3) HIV evades host with mutation (higher u) |
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Term
most mutations alter existing ____ creating new ______ |
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Definition
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Term
what happens to the second copy from unequal crossover? |
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Definition
can be conserved and produce multiple copies [homolog] - same gene
paralog: creating gene family with slight differences and novel function (globins)
can accumulate mutations sheltered from selection
(pseudogenes)- are devolved into junk DNA |
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Term
what happened with the extra copies of hsp 70 in d. melanogaster |
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Definition
extra copies improved susvival under EXTREME thermal stress but were DISADVANTAGEOUS under LOW stress --> TRADEOFF because unnecessary production of hsp is costly and evolution will strike a balance |
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Term
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Definition
reduce recombination, generates linkage disequilibirum |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
suppress recombination and have dominant markers |
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Term
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Definition
makes sure there is no recombination on certain chromosome but redirects recombination elsewhere |
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Term
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Definition
u=frequency of mutations s= effect of mutation on viability |
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Term
TRUE OR FALSE: mutations can reduce the viability up to 100% in harsh conditions |
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Definition
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Term
why are MA results an underestimate? |
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Definition
1) all lethal mutations are lost 2) silent mutations are not measured 3) viability only one component of fitness (didnt measure fertility, longevity ect) |
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Term
MA in c. elegants found how many new mutations/ genome/ generation? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
multiple mutations may have a stronger negative impact thta tthe sum of the individual effects |
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Term
how does a second copy create a new gene |
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Definition
it accumulates mutations sheltered from selection and if one works it gives a new gene |
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Term
effects of inversion in linkage (2) |
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Definition
1) gene combinations kept together and selected together 2) some exhibit clinal variation (over latitudinal gradient) |
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Term
invasion of north america by d. subobscura showed |
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Definition
identical cline in Est frequencies as in europe -larger bodies and extended growth related to cold wet climates |
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Term
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Definition
1. genetic hitchhiking (with superstars!) 2. background selection (good combo cant escape bad background) |
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Term
2 consequences of speciation by polyploidization |
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Definition
1. individuals are reproductively isolated 2. if they can self fertilize they are an instant species |
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Term
factors 1. against polylpoidization 2. for? |
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Definition
1. rare, inbreeding cost, gamete wastage from 3n fertilizations 2. 4n sometimes bigger (slower, but stress tolerant), self-fertilization common in some species (less inbreeding cost and low gamete wastage) and extra chromo set is freer to evolve as in gene duplication example |
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Term
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Definition
-triploids have some fertility (produce 2n gametes) -these 2N gametes can serve as a bridge to allow 4N polylpooid population to establish -increases genetic diversity and less inbreeding than plants compared to selfing -essential for plants that dont self |
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Term
why can polyploids prosper at the range limits? what is the effect? |
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Definition
because they are robust! concentrates them in an area that fosters successful reproduction |
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Term
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Definition
that most alleles are equivalent; diversity results from genetic drift. |
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Term
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Definition
argue that forces like shifting NS, heterozygote advantage, frequency- dependence (advantage to being rare) supports variation. |
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Term
measures of genetic diveristy (2) |
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Definition
1. heterozygosity (frequency of heterozygotes in a population) 2. proportion of genes polymorphic |
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Term
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Definition
• practically, it serves as a null model. Deviations from H-W equilibrium point to interesting problems for investigation. • conceptually, it solved a major dilemma for early population genetics: how variation can be maintained. |
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Term
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Definition
Similarity in traits that is not due to inheritance from a common ancestor. |
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Term
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Definition
disproportionately stronger selection against multiple mutants. |
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Term
nature of natural selection 8 misconceptions |
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Definition
1. natural selction acits on individuals but sonequences occur in populations 2. natural selection acts on phenotypes but evolution is changes in allele frequencies 3. natural seleciton is not forward looking 4. new traits evolve though natural selection acts on existing traits 5. natural selection does not lead to perfection 6. natural selction is NON random but it is also NON progressive (parasites, vestigial organs) 7. fitness is not circular 8. selection acts on individuals not for the good of the species |
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Term
3 reasons using fossils is tough |
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Definition
1) palaeontologists are rare 2) soft things don't fossilize 3) lots of environments are not very accessible |
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Term
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Definition
found indohyus has similiarties with whales based on bone density and ear morphology but place them from far from hippos within the artiodactyls |
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Term
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Definition
put whales back near hippos |
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Term
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Definition
balancers suppress recombination and have dominantly expressed marker,therefore they shelter genes from homozygosity -can be used to isolate chromosomes -minimize selection maximize drift to create mutations -they found that mutations accumulate to decrease viability |
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Term
why are MA results an underestimate? |
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Definition
lethal mutations are loss silent mutations not measured viability is not the only component of fitness most measurements done under lax conditions |
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Term
kondrashov's middle class neighbourhood |
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Definition
an alternate to balancing, you stop selection to observe mutations accumulate -kids are random picks and fertility is standardize so there is no selection |
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Term
denver et all mutation accumulation in c elegans |
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Definition
-indels are most common -genome can never be in equilibrium -mitochondrial DNA is even more mutable |
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Term
name 3 instances where mutating can be adaptive |
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Definition
1) DNA polymerase varies heritably in error rate leading to variation in per genome mutation rate (u) 2) HIV/pathogens evade host defence in higher mutation rate 3) the lenski lines that became mutators suddenly = source of evolution in asexual bacteria 4) when colonizing new environments |
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Term
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Definition
3/12 mutations became mutator strains |
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Term
true or false: recombination and mutation create new alleles and genes |
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Definition
FALSE: meiosis reshuffles but doesnt create new alleles |
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Term
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Definition
studied chromsome rearrangements in dros subobscura |
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Term
the latitudinal cline in the Est genes of d.subobscura showed |
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Definition
-probably an association between the genes in Est and something related to temperature -inversion polymorphisms can exibit clinal variation -clines result from natural selection! |
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Term
true or false: clonal organisms are never in linkage dis-equilibirum |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
chromosome inversions create |
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Definition
supergenes: alleles likely to be transmitted as a unit |
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Term
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Definition
new genes that can acquire new functions by mutations |
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Term
The most important source of new genes is probably ___________ the underlying mechanism for this is _________ |
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Definition
Most new genes probably originate from gene duplication due to unequal cross-over, as diagrammed in Figure 5.6 and discussed in Section 4.2. Gene duplication also creates new genes, and is associated with some major evolutionary events (such as the radiation of ray-finned fishes), but occurs less frequently that duplication of individual genes. |
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