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Pearson eText for Evolutionary Analysis -- Instant Access (Pearson+)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780137521029
Author: Jon Herron, Scott Freeman
Publisher: PEARSON+
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Textbook Question
Chapter 5, Problem 16Q
The amino acid sequences encoded by the red and green visual pigment genes found in humans are 96% identical (Nathans et al. 1986). These two genes are found close together on the X chromosome, while the gene for the blue pigment is located on chromosome 7. Among primates, only Old World monkeys, the great apes, and humans have a third pigment gene—New World monkeys have only one X-linked pigment gene. Comment on the following three hypotheses:
- One of the two visual pigment loci on the X chromosome originated in a gene duplication event.
- The gene duplication event occurred after New World and Old World monkeys had diverged from a common ancestor, which had two visual pigment genes.
- Human males with a mutated form of the red or green pigment gene experience the same color vision of our male primate ancestors.
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Chapter 5 Solutions
Pearson eText for Evolutionary Analysis -- Instant Access (Pearson+)
Ch. 5 - What is the difference between genetic variation,...Ch. 5 - We noted on the first page of the chapter that...Ch. 5 - Because you are studying different subjects, the...Ch. 5 - What are reaction norms, and why do they matter?...Ch. 5 - Consider the nucleotide sequence TGACTAACGGCT....Ch. 5 - Consider a population containing the following...Ch. 5 - How many redheads live in a village of 250 people,...Ch. 5 - Diagram two processes through which genes can be...Ch. 5 - If a gene gets retroduplicated, how can you...Ch. 5 - How do chromosome inversions happen? What...
Ch. 5 - Diagram the sequence of events that leads to the...Ch. 5 - Discuss factors that might cause mutation rates to...Ch. 5 - Which kind of mutation is most common: lethal,...Ch. 5 - Compare and contrast the evolutionary roles of...Ch. 5 - Suppose a silent mutation occurs in an exon that...Ch. 5 - The amino acid sequences encoded by the red and...Ch. 5 - Chromosome number can evolve by smaller-scale...
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