BIOL 206 Midterm: BIOL 206 Midterm #2 Notes.docx

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Two loci in a population are in linkage equilibrium when the genotype of a chromosome at one locus is independent of its genotype at the other locus: knowing the genotype of the chromosome at one locus is at no use at all in predicting the genotype at the other, the frequency of b on chromosomes carrying allele a is equal to frequencies of b chromosome carrying allele a, the frequency of any chromosome haplotype can be calculated by multiplying the frequencies of constituent alleles ((cid:224) chromosome observed frequencies: frequency of ab = frequency a frequency b, d (a. k. a the coefficient of linkage disequilibrium) is equal to 0: Linked loci haplotype (multilocus genotype) frequencies at linkage equilibrium can be estimated from the products of the frequencies of the constituent alleles: populations can have identical allele frequencies but different chromosome (or haplotype) frequencies, if the loci are at linkage disequilibrium the chromosome frequencies move closer to linkage equilibrium each generation.

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