scholarly journals GENE FREQUENCY CHANGES AT THE α-AMYLASE LOCUS IN EXPERIMENTAL POPULATIONS OF DROSOPHILA PSEUDOOBSCURA

Genetics ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 357-369
Author(s):  
Darrell G Yardley ◽  
Wyatt W Anderson ◽  
Henry E Schaffer

ABSTRACT The frequencies of alleles at the α-Amylase locus of D. pseudoobscura were followed in both large and small experimental populations. No evidence for balancing or directional selection was found, although our ability to detect weak selection is limited. The gene frequency changes in our experimental populations were consistent with the hypothesis of selective neutrality and genetic drift due to sampling error.

Genetics ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 485-494
Author(s):  
A F MacRae ◽  
W W Anderson

Abstract Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes usually are assumed to be neutral, unselected markers of evolving female lineages. This assumption was tested by monitoring haplotype frequencies in 12 experimental populations of Drosophila pseudoobscura which were polymorphic for mtDNA haplotypes. Populations were maintained for at least 10 generations, and in one case for 32 generations, while tests of mtDNA selective neutrality were conducted. In an initial population, formed from a mixture of two strains with different mitochondrial haplotypes, the frequency of the Bogota haplotype increased 46% in 3 generations, reaching an apparent equilibrium frequency of 82% after 32 generations. Perturbation of this equilibrium by addition of the less common haplotype resulted in a rapid, dramatic increase in frequency of the second haplotype, and a return to essentially the same equilibrium frequency as before perturbation. This behavior is not consistent with mtDNA neutrality, nor is the equilibrium consistent with a simple model of constant selection on the haploid mtDNAs. Replicate cage experiments with mtDNA haplotypes did not always generate the same result as the initial cage. Several lines of evidence, including manipulations of the nuclear genome, support the idea that both nuclear and mitochondrial genomes are involved in the dramatic mtDNA frequency changes. In another experiment, strong female viability selection was implicated via mtDNA frequency changes. Although the causes of the dramatic mtDNA frequency changes in our populations are not obvious, it is clear that Drosophila mitochondrial haplotypes are not always simply neutral markers. Our findings are relevant to the introduction of a novel mtDNA variant from one species or one population into another. Such introductions could be strongly favored by selection, even if it is sporadic.


1977 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Bijlsma ◽  
W. van Delden

SUMMARYGene frequency changes were followed in 17 experimental cage populations of Drosophila melanogaster polymorphic for the two loci G6PD and 6PGD. From these cages it was observed that selection was favouring the F alleles of both loci when the cages were started with low frequencies of these alleles (0·20F and 0·50F). A viability experiment and an extinction experiment also provided evidence that the F alleles of both loci were favoured. It is argued that the observed selection is not due to selective differences in genetic background of the different alleles, but is acting on the isozyme loci themselves.


1970 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Motoo Kimura ◽  
Tomoko Ohta

SUMMARYIf a polymorphic locus is maintained in finite populations by frequency-dependent selection with selective neutrality at equilibrium, it is generally accompanied by two genetic loads, i.e. the dysmetric and the drift loads. The former arises because the fitness of the population may not be at a maximum at the equilibrium gene frequency and the latter because genetic drift in small populations displaces the gene frequency from its equilibrium value.In some simple models of frequency-dependent selection considered, the drift load is independent of selection coefficients and is approximately equal to (n−1)/(2Ne), where n is the number of alleles and Ne is the effective population size.


Genetics ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-379
Author(s):  
Henry E Schaffer ◽  
Darrell Yardley ◽  
Wyatt W Anderson

ABSTRACT The method used by Fisher and Ford (1947) to study the spread of a gene in a natural population has been modified to analyze the variation in allele frequencies from generation to generation in a common experimental procedure. A further analysis has been developed that is more sensitive to directional trends in the allele frequency over generations, and its use in detecting the action of directional selection on gene frequency at a locus is discussed. The power of each of these statistical tests is calculated for a number of cases, and the tests are applied to sets of isozyme data from Drosophila pseudoobscura and Zea mays.


1970 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Watanabe ◽  
W. W. Anderson ◽  
Th. Dobzhansky ◽  
O. Pavlovsky

SUMMARYEight experimental populations of Drosophila pseudoobscura were made in laboratory population cages. All were polymorphic for ST, AR, CH, and PP gene arrangements in their third chromosomes, and all the chromosomes were of the same geographic origin. The initial frequencies of the gene arrangements were, however, different in the different populations. Natural selection has caused frequency changes in all the populations, from which we have attempted to infer the adaptive values of the different karyotypes. There was no evidence that the adaptive values were different in the populations begun from different initial frequencies of the inversions, although our ability to demonstrate such differences is severely limited. The selection process in these populations has been complex, and the simple model of constant adaptive values does not fit.


The snails Cepaea nemoralis and C. hortensis are remarkable for an extensive and stable polymorphism involving the colour and banding of the shell. It was formerly thought that the variation in frequency of the different morphs between populations was random. Cain & Sheppard, for nemoralis and Clarke, for C. hortensis , have shown that in many English colonies visual selection by thrushes, and no doubt other predators, strongly influences the frequencies of the morphs, the more conspicuous on a given background being more heavily predated. In consequence populations tend to match their backgrounds, but remain polymorphic. In some districts of high chalk downland, this correspondence with background does not occur. The predominance of a few morphs irrespective of habitat and background characterizes areas vastly larger than that of a panmictic population. Such a constancy of morph frequencies over a large and diverse area in spite of visual selection we call an area effect . The principal district we have studied is the Marlborough Downs, where in an area of several square kilometres there are no five-banded C. nemoralis although in a contiguous area they predominate. Part of the non-five-banded area has a vast excess of browns, and another part of yellows. The form spread-banded and the cross-product ratio of pink and yellow to unbanded and banded also show such effects. In some places the morph frequencies change with extraordinary abruptness over 100 to 300 m. The area effects are not due to differential incidence of visual predation, nor, since they bear no relation to variation of habitat, to differences in its direction. In only two subareas do we think that visual selection is affecting morph frequencies. The observed frequency distributions cannot be accounted for by sampling drift (‘genetic drift’) at the present day since the numbers involved are far too large and the frequencies too constant over large areas. In the few populations that have been observed for up to 10 years, no major changes of frequency have been found. The probability of a reduction to a few isolated populations because of ploughing up or drought in the last 200 years and subsequent drift and expansion is shown by the known agricultural history of the district to be slight. Restriction by spread of C. hortensis is also unlikely. A few colonies with restricted variation which might seem to show the action of drift or the founder effect are only extreme examples of local tendencies. Moreover, subfossil material from just off the south-western corner of the district strongly suggests that the area effects seen there have been in existence since Neolithic times. A survey of another district of high downland (Lambourn Downs) has shown a similar state of affairs to that on the Marlborough Downs, with a large area characterized by excess of yellow and mid-banded, and adjacent to it localities in which visual selection is effective. Observations from various other places on and off the Chalk also indicate that area effects are frequent on the Chalk, but that away from it visual selection is the principal agent determining local variation in gene frequencies. There is good evidence that the pigmentation of the body, which is apparently multifactorially controlled, also shows area effects; and part of the correspondence between body colour and background shade reported by Cain & Sheppard may be due to them. The evidence available for C. hortensis suggests that this species also shows area effects in shell characters. Yellow, pink or brown may predominate in C. nemoralis , but area effects in banding seem due mostly to the excess or defect of the modifier M 3 which reduces the five-banded phenotype to the form with only the middle band. It seems clear that the area effects are caused by some form of selection, but the topography, geology and vegetation of the Marlborough Downs gives no clue to what this could be for banding. Brown is known to be common only in the northern half of the range of nemoralis, and hortensis to extend much farther north than does nemoralis . A study of the distributions of the two species and of the brown morph on the Marlborough Downs suggests that local features of topography of open downland may produce localized climatic conditions influencing the relative distributions of the species and the abundance of brown. The abruptness of change of gene frequencies in both colour and banding might be caused by the change-over from one balanced gene complex to another requiring very different frequencies. Examination of Fisher’s equation for stability of a polymorphism maintained by heterosis (the most likely condition in these species) shows that in the districts where visual selection is effective in altering gene frequencies in nemoralis, the heterozygote advantage can only be of the order of a few percent, and that local differences of a few percent in the selective disadvantages of the homozygotes concerned could well produce area effects as marked as those we have observed. For biological purposes it is essential to recognize the difference between changes in gene frequency caused by selection and those produced by the effects of sampling error. ‘Genetic drift’ has been generally used to refer to the latter, but Sewall Wright uses it for all apparently random changes, whatever their cause, and perhaps for all changes in gene frequency; we therefore use sampling drift for the effects of sampling error. Surveys based only on the observations of frequencies and population size in widely scattered populations do not allow one to distinguish between the effects of selection that varies in direction and intensity from place to place (although more or less constant in time) and those of sampling drift. In general it is exceedingly difficult to identify the result of sampling drift in the wild except in certain situations. Casual collecting over such a district as the Marlborough Downs might well give the impression that sampling drift was effective there, but a more intensive survey shows the contrary.


1987 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 187-193
Author(s):  
Catherine Montchamp-Moreau ◽  
Mariano Katz

SummaryLinkage disequilibrium between five polymorphic enzymic loci of the third chromosome (Esterase-6, Phosphoglucomutase, Esterase-C, Aldehyde Oxidase and Acid Phosphatase) was studied in experimental populations of Drosophila simulans. Gametic data were obtained by mating sampled males with homozygous females at the five loci. Four cage populations were initiated with flies caught from natural populations. Extensive linkage disequilibrium was detected after 25 or 34 generations. The effective size of these populations was estimated about 400. Monte-Carlo simulations were performed in order to determine whether the observed disequilibria could be due to genetic drift. The observed probability distribution of the experimental values of r (the gametic correlation coefficient) was consistent with the distribution expected under random genetic drift. Our results are thus in accordance with the neutralist hypothesis.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document