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Population Genetics LabModerator: BioTeam
4 posts • Page 1 of 1
Population Genetics Lab
I'm having difficulty answering this particular lab question in my AP bio class. On one hand, you can agree that since it is a dominant allele it will persist throughout the population and that 75% of heterozygous mate offspring will be affected. On another, you can also argue that just because 3/4 of offspring from heterozygous parents will be affected, it won't necessarily affect the whole population to the point where 75% are affected with neurofibromatosis. Can anyone help?
Re: Population Genetics LabIf there were some selective advantage to having neurofibromatosis, then I could see the frequency of the allele increasing. But the opposite should happen if there is a disadvantage to carrying the allele. The actual prevalence of Type I NF is less than 1 in 200,000 individuals (that would be < 0.000005, and that would include all heterozygotes as well as homozygous dominant individuals—most of us must be homozygous recessives for NF1 it seems) so either the allele has only just arisen (not likely, but not impossible, either) or it is selected against and there will be no increase—never mind a rise to 75%—in the frequency of NF within the population (at least, not due to genetics; perhaps there can be an increase due to improvements in diagnosis and screening, but probably not an increase due to genetic transmission.)
Re: Population Genetics Labhow would you solve (7a+b+1)-(3a-4b-3) because we are supposed to use math to solve punett-squares
Re: Population Genetics LabRemoving the grouping and adding like terms gives 4a + 5b + 4, but what that has to do with Punett Squares I don't know.
4 posts • Page 1 of 1
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