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Chapter 11 and 12 from Campbell Biology 10th Edition By Keshara Senanayake Ms.Reep Chapter 11 - Mendel and Gene Idea Chapter 12 - The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance Chapter 11 Campbell Biology 10th Edition “Mendel and the Gene Idea”  Mendel worked w/ peas because they have a variety  a heritable feature that varies among individuals is called a character (like flower color)  each variety for a character is a trait (Purple vs. white) >Mendel controlled mating between plants  while pea plants self usually fertilize Mendel did stuff  Mendel tracked characteristics that occurred in distinct alternative forms (purple or white color)  made sure he started experiments w/ varieties that over many generations of self pollination produced the same variety as the parent plant  termed true breeding  Mendel matted two true-breeding plants via hybridization  true-breeding parents are the P generation >hybrid offspring  F1 generation  allowed F2 hybrids to pollinate created the F1 generation  from F2 Mendel deduced 2 fundamental principals: law of segregation and law of independent assortment The Law of Segregation Purple X White  produces all purple in F1  but F1 X F1  white reappear >Mendel reasoned heritable factor of white is masked  purple is dominant trait and white is a recessive trait  a 3:1 inheritance pattern in F2 (4) major concepts make up Mendel’s mode >(1) Alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characteristics  alternative versions of genes are called alleles  related to concept to chromosomes/DNA  each gene is a sequence of nucleotides at a specific place (locus) along a particular chromosome  DNA at locus can vary slightly in its nucleotide sequence/info (purple/white alleles are 2 diff DNA sequence variations on flower-color locus) >(2) For each character, an organism inherits two copies (2 alleles) of each parents, one from each parent  each somatic cell in diploid organism has (2) sets of chromosomes (one set from each parent)  (2) alleles at a particular locus may be identical (as in P generation) or differ (as in F1) >(3) If two alleles at a locus differ, then one, the dominant allele, determines the organism’s appearance; the other, the recessive allele, has no noticeable effect on the organism’s appearance >(4) Law of segregation states that two alleles for a heritable character segregate during gamete formation and end up in two different gametes >so an egg/sperm gets one of the two alleles that are present in the somatic cells of the organism making the gamete  this segregation corresponds to the distribution of the (2) members of a pair of homologous chromosomes to different gametes in meiosis  if a organism has identical alleles for a characteristic (true breeding) allele is present in all gametes (if different 50% dominant 50% recessive) >Punnett square is used to predict allele composition of all offspring resulting from a cross between individuals of known genetic makeup  capital is dominant (lowercase is recessive) organism that has a pair of identical alleles for a character is homozygous for the gene controlling that character  “breed true” because all their gametes contain the same allele  if we cross dominant homozygote with recessive homozygote every offspring has two different alleles and is said to be heterozygous for that gene  Heterozygous produce gametes with different alleles (not true breeding)  observable traits are the phenotype (genetic makeup is the genotype)  If you have a mysterious pea plant that is purple (can’t tell if PP or Pp) to determine genotype we can cross this plant w/ a white-flowered plant (pp) which will make only gametes w/ a white flowered p  allele in gamete contributed by mystery plant determine appearance of the offspring  if all purple it’s PP but if white/purple appear it is Pp  cross of Pp X pp cross will have a 1:1 phenotypic ratio  testcross is breeding an organism of unknown genotype w/ a recessive homozygote to reveal the genotype of that organism The Law of Independent Assortment  law of segregation was derived from experiments w/ a single character >F1 progeny produced in his crosses of true-breeding parents were monohybrids (heterozygous for the one particular trait being followed)  cross between such heterozygote is a monohybrid cross >second law of inheritance found by following (2) characteristics (like seed color/seed shape) >Mendel say yellow (Y) dominant and green (y) recessive  round (R) dominant and (r) wrinkled recessive >crossing (2) true breeding pea varieties that differ in both characters  cross w/ YYRR and YyRr >the F1 plants will be dihybrids  individuals heterozygous for the two characteristics followed in the cross YyRr >need to know if the two characters are transmitted from parents to offspring as a package (or independently) >In F1 YyRr has both dominant phenotypes (yellow/round) no matter what >needs to see if F1 plants self-pollinate and produce F2  to see if the hybrids transmit their alleles in the same combinations as their alleles were inherited from the P generation, then F1 hybrids will produce only two classes gametes: YR and yr  “dependent assortment” hypothesis says phenotypic ratio is 3:1 like a monohybrid cross >alternate hypothesis is that two pairs of alleles segregate independently of each other  states that genes are packaged into gametes in all possible allelic combination as long as each gamete has one allele for each gene >F1 plant (with self pollination) will produce (4) classes of gametes in equal quantities: YR, Yr, yR, and yr  sperm of four classes fertilize eggs w/ 4 classes so it will form 16 equally probably ways in which alleles can combine in the F2 generation  result in (4) phenotypic categories w/ ratio of 9:3:3:1  support hypothesis that the alleles for one gene segregate into gametes independently of the alleles of other genes Law of independent assortment: two or more genes assort independently of each other pair during gamete formation  applies only to genes located on different chromosomes not homologous The Laws of probability govern Mendelian inheritance  >in independent events one event does not affect the other’s probability of occurring  alleles of one gene segregate into gametes independently of another gene’s alleles The Multiplication and Addition Rules Applied to Monohybrids multiplication rule states that to determine the probability that two or more independent events will occur together in some specific combination, we multiple the probability of one event by the probability of another event >apply to F1 monohybrid cross  w/ seed shape as a heritable character the genotype of F1 plant is Rr  segregation in a heterozygous plant is like flipping a coin  each egg produced has a ½ chance of carrying the dominant allele (R) and a ½ chance have a recessive allele (r)  same odds apply to sperm cells  for a particular F2 plant to have wrinkled seed both sperm and egg must carry the r allele  probability that an r allele will be present in both gametes at fertilization if found by multiplying ½ (probability in egg to have r) X ½ (probability in sperm to have r)  so probability F2 plant in having wrinkled seeds is ¼ >to figure out that an F2 plant from a monohydric cross will be heterozygous rather than homozygous needs a 2nd rule  F1 gametes can combine to produce Rr offspring in two mutually exclusive ways: for any particular heterozygous F2 plant the dominant alleles can come from the egg or the sperm  according to the addition rule the probability that any one of two or more mutually exclusive events will occur is calculated by adding their individual probabilities  multiplication rule gives us the individual probability that we can now add together  probability for on possible way of obtaining an F2 heterozygote  dominant allele from the egg and recessive allele from the sperm is 1/5  probability for the other way, recessive allele from the egg and the dominant allele from the sperm is also ¼  via rule of addition we get the probability of an F2 heterozygote as ¼ + ¼ = ½. Solving Complex Genetics Problems with the Rules of Probability  rules of probability can be used to predict the outcome of crosses involving multiple characteristics  each allelic pair segregates independently during gametes formation thus a dithered or other multicharacter cross is equivalent to two or more independent monohybrid crosses occurring simultaneously  can determine probability of specific genotypes occurring in the F2 generation >consider this dihybrid cross simply mentioned before between YyRr heterozygotes >first focus on seed-color character  for monohybrid Yy plant we can deduce that the probabilities of the offspring genotypes are ¼ YY, ½ Yy, and ¼ for yy.  for seed shape we can deduce ¼ RR, ½ Rr, and ¼ rr  with these probabilities we can use the multiplication rule to determine the probability of each of the genotypes in the F2 generation So: Probability of YYRR = ¼ (probability of YY) X ¼ (RR) = 1/16 Probability of YyRR = ½ (Yy) X ¼ (RR) = 1/8 >both correspond to larger punnet square >imagine a cross of two pea varieties in which we track the inheritance of three characters  a cross of trihybrid w/ purple flowers and yellow, round seeds (heterozygous for all three genes) with a plant with purple flowers and green, wrinkled seeds (heterozygous for flower color but homozygous recessive for the other two characteristics) >w/ Mendel symbols our cross is PpYyRr X Ppyyrr  what fraction of offspring from this cross is predicted to exhibit the recessive phenotypes for at least two of the three characters? >first list all genotypes we could get that fulfill this condition: ppyyRr, ppYyrr, Ppyyrr, Ppyyrr, and ppyyrrr  next calculate the probability for each of these genotypes resulting from our PpYyRr X Ppyyrr cross by multiplying together the individual probabilities for the allele pairs >in a cross involving heterozygous and homozygous allele pairs (Yy x yy) the probability of heterozygous offspring is ½ and the probability of homozygous offspring is ½  we use addition rule to add the probabilities for all the different genotypes that fulfill the condition of at least two recessive traits: PpyyRr ¼ (probability of pp) x ½ (yy) X ½ 9Rr) = 1/16 PpYyrr (¼ X ½ X ½) = 1/16 Ppyyrr ½ X ½ X ½ = 2/16 Ppyyrr ¼ X ½ X ½ = 1/16 Ppyyrr ¼ X ½ X ½ = 1/16 Chance of at least (2) recessive traits = 6/16 = 3/8 >faster for solving genetics problems via rules of probability than by filling in punnet squares  rules of probability give us the chance of various outcomes  large the sample size the closer the outcomes Inheritance patterns are often more complex than predicted by simple Mendelian Genetics >extending Mendelian Genetics for a single gene  inheritance of characters determined by a single gene deviates from simple Mendelian patterns when alleles are not completely dominant or recessive , when a particular gene has more then (2) alleles or when a single gene produces multiple genotypes Degrees of Dominance  in Mendel’s pea experiment F1 offspring always looked like one of the two parental varieties because one allele in a pair showed complete dominance over the other some genes neither allele is completely dominant and F1 hybrids have a phenotype somewhere between those of the two parental varieties  called incomplete dominance  seen when red snapdragons are cross w/ white snapdragons  all F1 have pink flowers  this third intermediate phenotype results from flowers of the heterozygotes having less red pigment than red homozygotes  interbreeding F1 hybrids produces F2 offspring w/ a phenotypic ratio of one red to two pink to one white (the genotypic and phenotypic ratios for F2 generation are the same, 1:2:1) >segregation of red-flower and white-flower alleles in the gametes produced by the pink-flowered plants confirms that the alleles for flower color are heritable factors that maintain their identity in hybrids  in co dominance the two alleles can affect the phenotype in separate distinguishable ways  human MN blood group is determined by co dominant alleles for two specific molecules located on the surface of red blood cells M and N molecules >a single gene locus (at which two allelic variations are possible) determines the phenotype of this blood group  individuals homozygous for the M allele (MN) have red blood cells w/ only M molecules (homozygous N have only N) but BOTH M and N molecules are present on the red blood cells of individuals heterozygous for the M and N alleles (MN) >MN phenotype is not intermediate between M and N phenotypes  BOTH M and N phenotypes are exhibited by heterozygotes (w/ both molecules present) The Relationship Between Dominance and Phenotype note that an allele is dominant because it is seen in the phenotype (not because it studies a recessive allele) alleles are variations in a gene’s nucleotide sequence  when a dominant allele coexists w/ a recessive allele in a heterozygote they do not interact for an character, the observed dominant/recessive relationship of alleles depends on the level at which >tay sachs provides an example  brain cells of a child w/ tay sachs allele (homozygote) have the disease  at the organism level the tay sachs allele qualifies as recessive  the activity level of the lipidmetabolizing enzyme in heterozygotes is intermediate between that in an individual homozygous for the normal allele and in individual w/ tay sachs  intermediate phenotype observed at the biochemical level is characteristic of incomplete dominance of either allele  the heterozygote condition does not lead to disease symptoms since ½ of the normal enzyme is sufficient to prevent lipid accumulation in brain  we find that heterozygous individuals produce equal numbers of normal and dysfunctional enzyme molecules  thus at the molecular level the normal allele and the tay sachs are co dominant >so allele appears to be completely dominant, incompletely dominant, or co dominant depends on the level in which the phenotype is analyzed Frequency of Dominant Alleles  do not assume that a dominant allele is more common  polydactyl (extra toes/fingers) are caused by the presence of a dominant allele  but 5 digits (finger/toes) allele which is recessive is more common Multiple Alleles  ABO blood groups in humans are determined by three alleles of a single gene: I^A, I^B, and I >each person has two alleles of the three for the blood group gene which determines his/her blood phenotype: A, B, AB, or O  letters refer to two carbohydrates A and B found on a person’s red blood cells  carb A (type A) carb B (type B) both (type AB) neither (type O) Pleiotropy  most genes have multiple phonotypical effects  pleiotropy  pleiotropic alleles are responsible for the multiple symptoms associated w/ certain heredity diseases (cystic fibrosis/sickle-cell disease) >in garden peas the gene that determines flower color also affects the color of the coating on the outer surface of the seed (gray or white)  a single gene can affect a number of characteristics in an organism Extending Mendelian Genetics for two or more gees  dominance relationships/multiple allles/pleiotropy all do w/ effects of alleles in a single gene  consider a case where two or more genes determine a particular phenotype >in first case one gene affects the phenotype of another because the two gene products interact  in second multiple genes independently affect a single trait Epistasis  the phenotypic expression of a gene at one locus alters that of a gene at a second locus >example in Labrador retrievers  black coat color is dominant to brown  B and b will be the two alleles  for a lab to have brown fur bb “chocolate labs”  a second gene determines whether or not pigment will be deposited in the hair  dominant allele symbolized by E results in the deposition of either black or brown pigment depending on the genotype at the first locus  if the lab is homozygous recessive for the second locus (ee) then coat color is yellow (regardless for the genotype at the black/brown locus)  the gene for pigment deposition (E/e) is epistatic to the gene that codes for black or brown pigment (B/b) >if we mate black abs that are heterozygous for both genes (Bb/Ee) although the two genes affect the same phenotypic character (coat color) they follow the law of independent assortment  represents an F1 dithered cross  as result of epistatis the phenotypic ratio of G2 offspring is 9:3:4 and  other epistatis produce different rations but are all modified versions of 9:3:3:1 Polygenic inheritance  for many characteristics (human skin color/height) either/or classification is impossible because the characters vary in the population in graduations along a continuum  called quantitative characters >this usually indicated polygenic inheritance  additive effect of two or more genes on a single phenotypic character (opposite of pleitropy) >evidence to show skin pigment in humans is controlled by at least (3) separately inherited genes  consider three genes w/ dark-skin allele for each gene (A, B, or C) contribute one “unit” of darkness to the phenotype and being incompletely dominant to the other  light skin allele (a,b, and c)  AABBCC is very dark aabbcc is very light  AaBbCc would have an intermediate shade  AaBbCc and AABbcc would make same genetic contribution (three units) to skin darkness >7 skin color phenotypes that could result from a mating between AaBbCc heterozygotes  in large # of mating the majority of offspring will have intermediate phenotypes Nature and Nature: the Environmental Impact on Phenotype  in humans nutrition influences height, sun tanning darkens skin and experience improves performance on intelligence test  phenotypic range is broadest for polygenic characters  environment contributes to the quantitative nature of these characters (seen in the continuous variation of skin color)  geneticists refer to such characters as multifactorials  meaning that many factors (Both genetic and environmental) collectively influence phenotype Integrating a Mendelian View of Heredity and Variation >important to make the transition from the reductionist emphasis on single genes and phenotypic characters to the emergent properties of the organism as a whole  term phenotype can refer to not only a specific character but also to an organism in its entirely >term genotype can refer to an organism’s entire genetic makeup, not just its alleles for a single genetic locus  in most cases a gene’s impact on a phenotype is affected by other genes and by the environment Many human traits follow mendelian patterns of inheritance Pedigree Analysis  geneticist assemble information about members of a family into a tree diagram that describes the traits of parents and children across the generations  called a pedigree >diagram above shows three-generation pedigree that traces the occurrence of widow’s peak due to dominant allele W  individuals who lack a widow’s peak allele is homozygous recessive (ww)  two grandparents must have Ww genotype since some of their offspring are homozygous recessive  offspring in 2nd generation w/ window’s peak must also be heterozygous (product of Ww x ww)  third generation sister w/ widows peak can be Ww or WW for the 2nd one regarding earlobes (same family), f is recessive and F is dominant (results in free earlobes) >w/ pedigree you can use medelian inheritance to understand the genotypes shown for the family members  important application of a pedigree is to help us calculate the probability that a future child will have a particular genotype and phenotype  if the couple represented in the second generation decides to have one more child what is the probability the child will have widow’s peak?  this is like a mendalian F1 monohybrid cross (Ww X Ww) and thus the probability that a child will inherit a dominant allele and have a widows peak is ¾ (¼ WW + ½ Ww)  what is the probability the child will have attached earlobes  another monohybrid (Ff X Ff) but we need to figure out the chance that the offspring will be homozygous recessive (ff)  that probability is ¼ >what is the chance that the child will have a widow’s peak and attached earlobes?  assuming that the genes for these two characters are on different chromosomes the two pairs of alleles will assort independently in this dithered cross (WwFf X WwFf)  so we can use the multiplication rule: ¾ (chance of widow’s peak) X ¼ (chance of attached earlobes) = 3/16 (chance of widow’s peak and attached earlobes)  thousands of genetic disorders are known to be inherited as simple recessive traits The Behavior of recessive alleles  genes code for proteins of specific function >an allele that causes a genetic disorder (call it allele a)  codes for either a malfunctioning protein or no protein at all  in the case of recessive disorders, Heterozygotes (Aa) are typically normal in phenotype since one copy of the normal allele (a) produces a sufficient amount of the specific protein  so a recessively inherited disorder shows up only in the homozygous individuals (aa) who inherit one recessive allele from each parent >carriers are phenotypic ally normal w/ regard to the disorder, heterozygote may transmit the recessive allele to their offspring >a mating between two carriers corresponds to Mendelian F1 monohybrids cross  genotypic ratio for the offspring is 1AA : 2Aa: 1 aa  each child has a ¼ chance of inheriting a double dose of the recessive allele  three offspring w/ normal phenotype (AA and (2) Aa, which are heterozygous carriers)  recessive homozygotes could result from Aa x aa and aa X aa  if disorder is lethal before reproductive age or results in sterility not aa individuals will reproduce  when disease-causing recessive allele is rare it is unlikely two carriers w/ same harmful allele will meet  if man and woman are blood relatives the probability of passing on recessive traits increase greatly (consanguineous mating)  indicted in pedigrees by DOUBLE LINES  most common lethal disease in U.S is cystic fibrosis  the normal allele for this gene codes for a membrane protein that functions in the transport of chlorine ions between certain cells and the extra cellular fluid  these chlorine transport channels are defective or absent in the plasma membrane of children who inherit two recessive alleles for cystic fibrosis  result is an abnormally high concentration of extra cellular chloride (causes mucus that coats certain cells to become thicker/stickier)  mucus builds up in pancreas/lungs/other organs and leads to pleiotropic (multiple) effects (this is AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE)  sickle cell disease is the most common inherited disease among people from African descent >two sickle cell alleles are necessary for an individual to manifest full-blown sickle-cell disease  presence of one sickle-cell allele can affect the phenotype  so at the organism level the normal allele is incompletely dominant to the sickle cell allele >heterozygote (carriers) have sickle-cell trait are usually healthy  at molecular level the two alleles are co dominant; both normal/abnormal (sickle-cell) hemoglobin are made in heterozygotes Dominantly inherited Disorders  one example is achondroplasia, a form of dwarfism  heterozygous individuals have that phenotype >dominant alleles that cause a lethal disease are much less common than recessive alleles that have lethal effects  lethal recessive can pass from one generation to another by heterozygous carriers because the carriers have normal phenotypes  a lethal dominant allele often cause death because an individual can mature/reproduce  late-onset diseases caused by lethal dominant allele may pass on (Huntington’s disease which is autosomal dominant) many people are susceptible to diseases that have a multifactoral basis (a genetic component + a significant environmental influence) (like heart disease)  genetic counseling is based on mendelian genetics ** from 9th**  amniocentesis can determine whether a developing fetus has a genetic disease (like tay sachs)  procedure involves a physical inserting a needle into the uterus and extracting about 10mL of amniotic fluid >alternative technique is called chorionic villus sampling (CVS)  a physician inserts a narrow tube through the cervix into the uterus and suctions out a tiny small of tissue from the placenta  can be tested  PKU can be detected at birth  cannot metabolize the amino acid phenylalanine CHAPTER 12 Campbell Biology “The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance” Mendelian Inheritance has its physical basis in the behavior of chromosomes >chromosomes and genes are both present in pairs in diploid cells; homologous chromosomes separate and alleles segregate during the process of meiosis; and fertilization restores the paired condition for both others independently >according to the chromosome theory of inheritance Mendelian genes have specific loci (positions) along chromosomes and it is the chromosomes that undergo segregation and independent assortment >figure on the next page shows the behavior of homologous chromosomes during meiosis for the segregation of the alleles at each genetic locus to different gametes. >also shows behavior of no homologous chromosomes can account for independent assortment of the alleles for two or more genes located on different chromosomes Morgan’s experimental evidence showed that chromosomes are the location of Mendel’s heritable factors >Morgan used Drosophila Melanogaster (type of fruit fly) (insect that feeds on the fungi growing on fruit) >they have four chromosomes (3 pairs of autosomes and 1 pair of sex chromosomes) >most commonly observed in natural populations such as red eyes in Drosophila is called the wild type  alternatives are called mutant phenotypes, like white eyes >Morgan and his students invented notation for symbolizing alleles in Drosophila  white eyes is w while the superscript + identifies a wild-type trait: w+ (red eyes) >human genes are usually written in capitals (HD for Huntington’s) Correlating behavior of a Gene’s Alleles with behavior of a chromosome pair  Morgan mated white eyes male fly with red eye female and all F1 offspring had red eyes (suggested wild type is dominant)  when Morgan bred f1 together he saw classical 3:1 phenotypic ratio among F2  saw that white eye trait showed up only in males (all F2 females at red eyes and ½ males had red eyes and ½ males had white eyes)  said eye color was sex linked (diagram mentioned from before)  Note that female sly has TWO X chromosomes and male fly has a X and a Y  Morgan suggested that the gene involved in his white eye mutation was exclusively on the X chromosome w/ no corresponding allele present on the Y chromosome >reasoning: for a male a single copy of the mutant allele would confer white eyes (male has only one X) so no wild type allele (w+) is present to mask recessive allele  female could have white eyes only if both her X chromosomes carried the recessive mutant allele (w)  impossible for F2 females because all F1 fathers had red eyes >finding of the correlation between a particular trait and an individual’s sex provided support for chromosome theory of inheritance (specific gene is carried on a specific chromosome) Sex-linked genes exhibit unique patterns of inheritance human males have X and Y  Y is smaller than X  2 X’s becomes a female >short segments at either end of the Y chromosome are the only regions that are homologous w/ corresponding regions of the X  homologous regions allow the X and Y chromosomes in males to pair and behave like homologous chromosome during meiosis in the testes >in testes/ovaries two sex chromosomes segregate during meiosis  each egg receives one X chromosome >½ the sperm cells a male produces receives an X chromosome and ½ receive a Y chromosome  if sperm w/ X fertilizes a cell the zygote is a XX (Female)  mammalian sex determine is chance (50-50) >in Drosophila males are XY but sex depends on the ratio between the # of X chromosomes and the # of auto some sets (not based purely on presence of Y) >SRY is a gene on the Y chromosome required for the development of testes, named “Sex-determiningregion”  absence of SRY the gonads develop into ovaries >a gene located on either sex chromosome is called a sex-linked gene  those located on the Y chromosome are called Y-linked genes >human X chromosome contains X-linked genes  males and females inherit a umber of X chromosomes leads to a pattern of inheritance different from that produced by genes located on auto some Inheritance of X-linked Genes  most Y-linked genes determine sex  X chromosome have genes for many characters unrelated to sex >fathers pass X-linked alleles to all daughters but none to their sons  mothers can pass X-linked alleles to both sons and daughters (bellow figure shows inheritance pattern of X-linked color blindness) >if x-linked trait is due to a recessive allele a female will express the phenotype only if she is homozygous for that allele  because males have only one locus we use the term hemizygous  any male receiving the recessive allele from his mother will express the trait  so far more males than females have X-linked recessive disorders  colorblindness is X-linked and a female can get two doses of X (color-blind father and a mate who is a carrier)  Duchenne muscular dystrophy is a muscle degenerative disorder that is also X-linked (recessive) >Hemophilia is an X-linked recessive disorder regarding problem with blood clotting X inactivation in female mammals  females inherit two X  note most of one X chromosome in each cell in female mammals becomes inactivated during early embryonic development (so it does not have 2x the number of X-linked genes)  so cells of females and males have the same effective dose (one copy) of most X-linked genes >inactive X in each cell of a female condenses into a compact object  “Barr body” which lies inside of the nuclear envelope >most of the genes of the X chromosome that forms the Barr body are not expressed  bar-body chromosomes in the ovaries are reactivated in the cells that gives rise to eggs so every female gamete has an active X >selection of which X chromosomes will form Barr body occurs randomly and independently in each embryonic cell present at the time of X inactivation  so females consist of a mosaic of two types of cells 1) those with the active X derived from their mother 2) those with the active X derived from the mother  after an X chromosome is inactive in a particular cell all mitotic descendants of the cell have the same inactive X  if a female is heterozygous for a sex-linked trait ½ her cells will express one allele and others will express the alternate allele  mosaicsm results in the mottled coloration of a tortoiseshell cat (diagram below)  inactivation of an X chromosome involves modification of DNA and histone proteins w/ it  attaching a methyl group (-CH3) to one of the nitrogenous base of DNA nucleotides  certain regions in X chromosome are involved in inactivation  (2) regions, one on each X associate briefly w/ each other on each X chromosome at an early stage then one of the genes, XIST (X-inactive specific transcript) becomes active only on the chromosome that will become the Barr body  multiple copies of RNA produce of this gene attach to the X chromosome on which they are made  interaction of RNA w/ chromosome initiate X inactivation and RNA produces of other genes nearby regulate the process Linked genes tend to be inherited together because they are located near each other on the same chromosome  chromosome have many genes  genes located near each other on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together  called linked genes (sex-linked = single gene on sex chromosome / linked genes = two or more genes on the same chromosome that are inherited together) How Linkage Affects Inheritance  we can see linkage affecting inheritance of two different characters in the Drosophila experiments  like body color and wing size (each w/ different phenotypes)  wild-type flies have gray bodies/normal-sized wings  mutants have black bodies/smaller “vestigial” wings (neither on sex chromosome)  Morgan did crosses shown in figure below  generate F1 dithered flies and second a test cross  concluded body color/wing size are inherited together in certain parental combinations since genes for these characters are near each other on the same chromosome  above shows both combinations of traits not seen in P generation were also produced in Morgan’s experiments (showing both traits are not always linked)  need to explore genetic recombination (production of offspring with combinations of traits that differ from those found in either P generation parent) Genetic Recombination and Linkage meiosis/random fertilization generate genetic variation in offspring of sexually reproducing organism due to independent assortment of chromosomes and crossing over in Meiosis I Recombination of Unlinked Genes: Independent Assortment of Chromosomes  in a cross with a yellow-round pea that is heterozygous for both seed color/seed shape (dithered YyRr) w/ a plant w/ green-wrinkled seeds (homozygous for both, yyrr) will produce YyRr, yyrr, Yyrr, yyRr >note ½ (YyRr and yyrr) match either parental phenotype and are called parental type  two nonparental phenotypes are called recombinant types (recombinants)  if 50% of all offspring are recombinants it is said that there is a 50% frequency of recombination  50% frequency of recombination in these testcrosses is observed for any two genes that are located on different chromosomes (unlinked)  basis of unlinked genes is the random orientation of homologous chromosomes at metaphase I of meiosis (leads to independent assortment of two unlinked genes) Recombination of Linked Genes: Crossing Over  as we saw in the figure above (15.9) most of the offspring of the test cross for body color/wing size had parental phenotypes  suggest the two genes were on the same chromosome (since occurrence of parental types w/ a frequency greater than 50% indicated genes are linked  17% offspring were recombinants)  some process must occasionally break physical connection between specific genes on same chromosome  crossing over  accounts for the recombination of linked genes  occurs while replicated homologous chromosomes are paired during prophase of meiosis I  proteins help in exchange of corresponding segments of maternal/paternal chromatids  end portions of 2 nonsister chromatids trade places each time as crossover occurs  we can observe how crossing over in dihybrid females fly results in recombinant eggs and then recombinant offspring in the testcross  most eggs had chromosome w/ either b+ vg+ or b vg parents genotype for body color and wing size  some eggs had recombinant chromosome (b+ vg or b v g+)  fertilization of various eggs by homozygous recessive sperm (b vg) produced offspring population w/ 17% exhibited a no parental recombinant phenotype (showing combinations of alleles not seen before in P) New Combinations of Alleles: Variation for Natural Selection  meiosis contributes to the variation in offspring  each pair of homologous chromosomes line up independently of other pairs during metaphase I and cross before that in prophase I (mix/match maternal/paternal homologs)  allele of genes as shown w/ Mendel lead to variation also >we can now see that recombinant chromosomes resulting from crossing over may bring alleles together in new combinations and subsequent events of meiosis distribute to gametes the recombinant chromosomes in a multitude of combinations  random fertilization furthers the variant allele combination >gives the raw materials for natural selection to work  if traits conferred by particular combination of alleles are better suited for a given environment organism w/ those genotypes will thrive/leave more offspring  letting the continuation of their genetic complements  the interplay between environment and genotype will determine which genetic combination persist over time Mapping the Distance Between Genes Using Recombination Data: Scientific Inquiry  discovery of linked genes and recombination due to crossing over led to the construction of the genetic map, an ordered list of genetic loci along a particular chromosome  led by Sturtevant, he hypothesized the % of recombinant offspring, the recombination frequency, calculated previously depends on the distance between genes on a chromosome  assumed crossing over is a random event w/ chance of crossing over approximately equal at all points along a chromosome  genetic map based on recombination frequencies is called a linkage map  above figure shows Sturtevant’s linkage map of (3) genes  body color (b), wing size (vg) and cinnabar (cn) [affects eye color] >cinnabar eyes is a mutant phenotype which is a brighter red than wild-type  recombination frequency between cn and b and between cn and b is 9%; between cn and vg is 9.5% and between b and vg 17%  shows that crossovers between cn and b and between cn and vg are ½ are frequent as crossovers between b and vg  only map w/ cn about midway between b and vg is consistent w/ these data  Sturtevant expressed distance between genes in map units; one map unit = 1% recombinant frequency some genes on a chromosome are so far away from each other that crossover between each other is certain  observed frequency of recombination involving (2) such genes can have a maximum value of 50% >a result indistinguishable from that for genes on different chromosomes  the physical connection between genes on the same chromosome is not reflected in the results of genetic crosses  despite being on the same chromosome (physically connected)  genes are genetically unlinked  alleles of such genes assort independently like their on different chromosomes >genes located far apart on a chromosome are mapped by adding the recombination frequencies from crosses involving closer pairs of genes lying between the two distant genes  genes clustered into groups that are linked genes are Linkage groups >because linkage map is based on recombination frequencies it is an approximate picture of a chromosome  frequency of crossing over is not really uniform over the length of the chromosome and therefore map units do not correspond to actual physical distances  linkage maps portrays the order of the genes along a chromosome (but not the precise locations of those genes) >geneticist construct cytogenetic maps of chromosomes which locate genes w/ respect to chromosomal features and these maps display the physical distances between gene loci in DNA nucleotides >comparing linkage maps and physical map w/ a cytogenetic map of the same chromosome we find that the linear order of the genes is identical in all maps (but not the spacing between genes) Alterations of chromosome number or structure cause some genetic disorders  phenotype of an organism can be affected by small-scale changes involving individual genes  random mutations can lead to new alleles  large-scale chromosomal changes can affect an organism’s phenotype  physical/chemical problems/errors during meiosis can damage chromosomes in major ways  can lead to miscarriages/individuals born w/ thee types of genetic defects exhibit various developmental disorders  plants may tolerate such genetic defects better than animals do Abnormal Chromosomal Number  an occasional problem occurs when meiotic spindle distributes chromosomes to daughter cells incorrectly  no disjunction in which the members of a pair of homologous chromosomes do not move apart properly during meiosis I or sister chromatids fail to separate during meiosis II  one gamete receives two of the same type of chromosome and another gametes receives no copy <if either of the aberrant gametes unites w/ a normal one at fertilization the zygote will have an abnormal number of a particular chromosomes (known as aneuploidy)  fertilization involving a gamete that has no copy of a particular chromosome will lead to a missing chromosome in the zygote (lead to 2n-1 chromosome)  the aneuploid zygote is monosomic for that chromosome if a chromosome is present in triplicate in the zygote (lead to 2n+1 chromosome) the aneuploid cell is trisomic for that chromosome  mitosis will then transmit the anomaly to all embryonic cells  if organism survives it has a set of traits caused by the abnormal dose of the genes associated with the extra or missing chromosome (down syndrome is trisomy) non disjunction also occur during mitosis  if an error takes place early in embryonic development then the aneuploid condition is passed along by mitosis to a large # of cell  some organisms have more than two complete chromosome sets in all somatic cells  term for this chromosomal alteration is polyploidy >triploidy (3N) tetraploidy (4N) are 3 and 4 chromosomal sets respectively >a triploid may arise by the fertilization of an abnormal diploid egg produced by no disjunction of all its chromosomes  tetrapolidy can come from the failure of the 2n zygote to divide after replicating its chromosomes  subsequent normal mitotic divisions would then produce a 4n zygote  polyploidy is common in plants (bananas = 3n / wheat = 6n / strawberries = 8n) Alterations of Chromosome Structure errors in meiosis or damaging agents (radiations) can cause breakage of chromosomes and lead to (4) types of changes in chromosome structure  deletion is when a chromosomal fragment is lost  affect chromosome is missing certain genes  “deleted” fragment may become attached as an extra segment to a sister chromatid making a duplication  a detached fragment can attach to a nonsister chromatid of a homologous chromosome  although the “duplicated” segments might not be identical because the homologs could carry different alleles of certain genes >a chromosomal fragment may also reattach to the original chromosome but in the reverse orientation producing an inversion  4th type results of chromosomal breakage is for the fragment to join a nonhomologous chromosome  “translocation” >deletions/duplications are common in meiosis  during crossing over there are unequal-sized DNA exchanges  products involve one chromosome w/ deletion and one chromosome w/ duplication >diploid embryo that is homozygous for a large deletion (or has single X chromosome w/ large deletion) may have a lethal condition  in reciprocal translocations (where segments are exchanged between no homologous chromosomes) and in inversions the balance of genes is not abnormal (all genes are present in normal doses)  translocations/inversions can alter the phenotype because a gene’s expression can be influenced by its location w/ neighboring genes Human Disorders Due to Chromosomal Alterations  syndrome is a characteristic of the type of aneuploidy Down Syndrome  result of an extra chromosome 21 Aneuploidy of Sex Chromosomes >appear to upset the genetic balance less than autosomes  Y carries few genes and extra copies of X become inactivates as Barr bodies ins somatic cells  an extra X in males producing XXY cause Klinefelter syndrome (man is sterile)  an extra Y, XYY these males are generally normal  females with XXX (heh) are healthy but are at risk for learning disabilities  monosomy X (Turner’s syndrome) is X0 (only viable monosomy in humans)  they are sterile Disorders Caused by Structurally Altered Chromosomes  deletions in human chromosomes even in heterozygous state cause severe problems  cri du chat results from a specific deletion in chromosome 5 >chromosomal transportation have been implicated in certain cancers such as chronic myelogenous leukemia #LAST BIO STUDY SHEET FOR 1st TERM YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEAAA BOIIIIIIIIIIII