Window on Humanity Conrad Phillip Kottak Third Edition Chapter 3 Evolution, Genetics, and Human Variation © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Overview • • • • Evolution and natural selection Genetics Mechanisms of genetic evolution Human biological adaptation © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. The Origin of Species – Creationism • Divine creation of life forms as described in Genesis • Biological characteristics of life forms immutable – Carolus Linnaeus – first biological classification (taxonomy) of plants and animals – Fossil record – raised doubts about creationism – Catastrophism • Modified version of creationism • Ancient life forms destroyed by catastrophes (e.g., fires, floods) then replaced by new, divinely created species © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Theory and fact • Alternative to creationism and catastrophism was transformism, also called evolution – Charles Darwin • Influenced by Lyell’s concept of uniformitarianism – Explanations for past events should be sought in the long-term action of ordinary forces observable today – Current geological features are the result of long-term natural forces • Darwin applied the notions of uniformitarianism and long-term transformation to living things – All life forms are ultimately related – Number of species has increased over time © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Natural selection • Process by which nature selects the forms most fit to survive and reproduce in a given environment • Necessary conditions for selection to occur: • Variation within a population • Competition among individuals for strategic resources – Individuals whose attributes render them fitter to survive and reproduce in a given environment will do so in greater numbers than individuals that are less fit – Differential reproductive success (rather than survival of the fittest) • Evolutionary theory is used to explain, to show how and why © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Genetics • Helps us understand the causes of the biological variation upon which natural selection operates – Mendelian genetics – studies how chromosomes transmit genes across generations – Biochemical genetics – examines structure, function, and changes in DNA – Population genetics – investigates natural selection and other causes of genetic variation, stability, and change in breeding populations © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Genetics • Mendel’s experiments – Gregor Mendel – discovered that heredity is determined by discrete particles or units – Two basic forms of traits: dominant and recessive • Dominant forms mask recessive forms in hybrid (mixed) individuals • Reappearance of recessive traits in later generations – “Dominance produces a distinction between genotype, or hereditary make up and phenotype, expressed physical characteristics.” © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Genetics: – Basic genetic units (genes or alleles) are located on chromosomes • Humans have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) • Genes – positions on chromosomes that wholly or partially determine biological traits • Alleles – biochemically different forms of a given gene – Individuals may be homozygous or heterozygous with respect to a particular gene • Homozygous – possessing two identical alleles (TT) (tt) • Heterozygous – possessing different alleles (Tt) © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Genetics • Dominance produces a distinction between genotype and phenotype – Genotype – hereditary makeup – Phenotype – expressed physical characteristics • Some traits have only dominant and recessive forms • Other traits (e.g., human blood type) are determined by more than two alleles – Alleles may be codominant © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Independent assortment • Law of independent assortment – Formulated by Mendel – Traits are inherited independently of one another • The fact that traits are inherited independently and are recombined is one of the ways that variety is produced in a population. • Create new types on which natural selection can operate – Mitosis – ordinary cell division – Meiosis – production of sex cells, each with only 23 chromosomes – Fertilization – combination of 23 chromosomes from each parent • Parents’ genotypes can be assorted in more than 8 million (223) different ways © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Population genetics • Studies stability and change in gene frequencies within breeding populations • Gene pool – all the alleles, genes, chromosomes, and genotypes within a breeding population • Genetic evolution – change in gene frequency (the frequency of alleles) in a breeding population from generation to generation © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Four mechanisms of genetic evolution: 1. 2. 3. 4. Natural selection Mutation Genetic drift Gene flow © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. 1. Natural Selection • Genotype vs. phenotype – Phenotype is influenced by both genotype and the environment – Human biological plasticity • Natural selection operates only on phenotype (not on genotype) • Natural selection affects gene frequencies within a population • Traits that are adaptive in a given environment will be selected for • Individuals possessing the alleles responsible for those traits will reproduce more frequently © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. 1. Natural Selection, cont. – Directional selection • Long-term selection of the same adaptive trait(s) from generation to generation • Maladaptive alleles may be removed from a gene pool • Continues as long as environmental forces stay the same – Sexual selection – the process by which certain traits of one sex are selected because of advantages they confer in winning mates © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. 1. Natural Selection, Cont. Stabilizing selection • Selective forces may favor a balanced polymorphism in which the frequencies of two or more alleles remain constant between generations – Example: two alleles (HbA and HbS) that affect the production of human hemoglobin • Homozygous for HbA = normal hemoglobin • Homozygous for HbS = sickle-cell anemia • High frequencies of the HbS allele exist among certain populations in Africa, India, and the Mediterranean • HbS allele persists because the heterozygote is the fittest phenotype in malarial environments – Adaptation and fitness are in relation to specific environments © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. 2. Mutation • Mutation – Changes in the DNA molecules of which genes and chromosomes are built – Occurs spontaneously and regularly – Produces variety on which natural selection may operate © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. 3. Random genetic drift • Change in allele frequency that results from chance rather than from natural selection • May operate in any population, large or small, but more rapid in small populations © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. 4. Gene flow • Exchange of genetic material between populations of the same species • Produces variety on which natural selection can operate • Tends to prevent speciation (the formation of new species) – Species – groups of related organisms whose members can interbreed to produce offspring that can live and reproduce – Speciation occurs when populations of the same species are isolated from each other (lack of gene flow) and, as a result of genetic change, become incapable of interbreeding © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Human biological adaptation – Because of extensive gene flow and interbreeding, Homo sapiens has not evolved subspecies or distinct races – Biological variation between human populations involves gradual shifts (clines) in gene frequencies and other biological features © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Human biological adaptation • Genes and disease – Infectious diseases posed an increasing threat to human populations beginning with food production (10,000 years ago) – Tropical diseases (e.g., malaria, schistosomiasis, and filariasis) affect more than 10 percent of the world’s population today © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. CHAPTER 3 Evolution, Genetics, and Human Variation • Genes and Disease – Human blood types play an important role in resistance to some diseases • Various alleles producing human blood types interact with infectious and noninfectious ailments • For example, type A or AB blood cells seem to make a person more susceptible to smallpox, while the presence of O or B blood cells appears to increase smallpox resistance © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Human biological adaptation • Lactose tolerance – Phenotypical adaptation – adaptive changes which occur during an individual’s lifetime – Lactose tolerance (ability to digest milk) determined by both genes and phenotypical adaptation • People from herding populations remain lactose tolerant into adulthood, while those from nonherding populations do not • Lactose tolerance among descendents of herding populations – genetic adaptation to a milk-rich diet • Lactose tolerance can vary during an individual's life, depending on amount of milk consumed – phenotypical adaptation © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved.