Karyotyping and Pedigrees {PowerPoint}
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Transcript Karyotyping and Pedigrees {PowerPoint}
Pedigrees and
Karyotyping
Analyzing Inheritance Patterns
and Chromosomes
Pedigree
Karyotype
Engage
Sex-Linked Recessive – Hemophilia
“The Royal Disease”
Read the short story Alexis: The Prince Who Had Hemophilia –
by:-Kelley, Laureen A.
Set in the early 1900s, this is the story of the youngest child of Tsar
Nicholas II of Russia, last Tsar of Russia. The story includes how
Alexis's hemophilia influenced the course of events in Russia that led
to the Russian Revolution
Some History
Hemophilia has played an
important role in Europe's
history
The disease began to crop up
in Great Britain's Queen
Victoria’s children
It became known as the
"Royal disease" because it
spread to the royal families
of Europe through Victoria's
descendants
How it Spread
it spread through the
Royal Houses of Europe
as monarchs arranged
marriages to consolidate
political alliances.
We can trace the
appearance of
hemophilia as it popped
up in Spain, Russia, and
Prussia by looking at the
family tree.
The Royal Family Tree
Queen Victoria's son Leopold's
Family
His daughter, Alice of
Athlone, had one
hemophilic son (Rupert)
and two other children -a boy and a girl -- whose
status is unknown.
What is the chance that
her other son was
hemophilic?
What is the probability
that her daughter was a
carrier? hemophiliac?
The Spanish Connection
Now for the Spanish connection:
Victoria's youngest child, Beatrice,
gave birth to one daughter, one
normal son, and two hemophilic
sons.
Looking at the pedigree of the
royal family, identify which of
Beatrice's children received the
hemophilic gene; why can you
make this conclusion? Notice that
Beatrice's daughter, Eugenie,
married King Alfonso XIII of
Spain and had six children, one of
whom was the father of Juan
Carlos, the current King of Spain.
Would you predict that Juan
Carlos was normal, a carrier, or a
hemophilic?
German and Russian Influences
Explore
Explore 1
Sex-Linked Inheritance
Explore 2
What Do You Know About Diabetes?
Karyotyping
Analyzing Chromosomes
Engage
Genetic Disorders
Patau Syndrome
Edward Syndrome
Klinfelter’s Syndrome
Turner Syndrome
Super Male Syndrome
Super Female Syndrome
47, XX or XY, +13
serious eye, brain,
circulatory defects as
well as cleft palate.
1:5000 live births.
Children rarely live
more than a few
months.
Patau Syndrome
Cleft Palate
Edward Syndrome
almost every organ system affected 1:10,000 live
births. Children with full Trisomy 18 generally do
not live more than a few months.
Klinefelter’s Syndrome
Male sex organs; unusually small testes, sterile.
Breast enlargement and other feminine body
characteristics. Normal intelligence.
Turner Syndrome
the ONLY viable monosomy
Super Male and
Super Female
Has
an XYY
- Tall male with heavy acne
- Some tendency to mental
retardation
Aggressive tendency
- Has an XXX
- Fertile
females with
normal
intelligence
Explore 2
Analyzing chromosomes of a normal
male or female
Normal Female
Normal Male
Explain
Questions
How many chromosomes come from
your Father?
How many chromosomes come from
your Mother?
What are chromosome pairs 1-22
called?
What is chromosome pair 23 called?
Parts of a chromosome
All human chromosomes have two arms
P
– the short arm is referred to as the ____
arm (petite)
Q
– the long arm as the ___
arm
Disorders
Name 3-4 diseases caused by a
chromosomal abnormality.
What most often causes this abnormal
number of chromosomes?
Nondisjunction
Terms to Know
If either of these gametes unites with another
during fertilization, the result is
Aneuploidy
________________
(any abnormal
chromosome number)
Trisomy
A _____________cell
has one extra
chromosome (2n +1).
Monosomy
A ___________
cell has one missing
chromosome (2n - 1)
Elaborate
Draw pedigrees from the given problems.
The Royal Family Tree
Elaborate 2
Clues From the Karyotype
– You will become a geneticists by
identifying, organizing and studying
human chromosomes to determine if any
chromosomal disorder is present in your
patient.
Evaluate
Without any assistance, identify 4 of
the 6 karyotypes with the correct
disorder, male or female, and normal
or abnormal.