ap15-ChromosomalBasisofInheritance 07-2008

Download Report

Transcript ap15-ChromosomalBasisofInheritance 07-2008

Homework for Wednesday, Jan 30
• P. 285: problems 4 and 7
• In Student Study Guide:
– Interactive questions: 15.2, 15.3, 15.4
– Test your Knowledge:2, 6, 7, 20
You get 5 minutes to prepare for the class
answers to one of the following.Teams of
2-3:
• 1.What is the Chromosome theory of inheritance?
• 2. Distinguish between “wild-type”; “mutant” phenotypes, and
give an example
• 3. Where are the red/white eye alleles located in fruit flies?
What did Morgan discover?…….
• 4. explain Fig. 15.3
• 5. Distinguish between sex-linked genes and linked genes.
• 6. What is Genetic recombination?
• 7. Refer to Fig. 15.4-give the phenotype of the wild-type
female, and the double mutant male (draw on board)
CHAPTER 15
THE CHROMOSOMAL
BASIS
OF
INHERITANCE
Section A: Relating Mendelism to Chromosomes
1. Mendelian inheritance has its physical basis in the behavior of
chromosomes during sexual life cycles
2. Morgan traced a gene to a specific chromosome
3. Linked genes tend to be inherited together because they are
located on the same chromosome
4. Independent assortment of chromosomes and crossing over
produce genetic recombinants
5. Geneticists use recombination data to map a chromosome’s
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
genetic loci
The Chromosomal Theory
of Inheritance
• Genes have
specific loci on
chromosomes
and it is the
chromosomes that
undergo
segregation and
independent
assortment
2. Morgan traced a gene to
a specific chromosome
• Thomas Hunt Morgan was the
first to associate a specific
gene with a specific
chromosome
• early 20th century.
• Drosophila melanogaster, a fruit fly species
that eats fungi on fruit.
– prolific breeders
– generation time of two weeks.
– Fruit flies have three pairs of autosomes and a
pair of sex chromosomes (XX in females, XY in
– Morgan discovered a single male fly with
white eyes instead of the usual red.
• wild type: the normal or most
frequently observed phenotype
• mutant phenotypes: Alternatives
Fig. 15.2
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• White Eyed Male x Red-eyed female
offspring
•
F1 offspring X F1
the F2 offspring.
all red eyed
classic 3:1 phenotypic ratio in
• Surprisingly, the white-eyed trait
appeared only in males.
– All the females and half the males had red eyes.
• Morgan concluded that a fly’s eye
color was linked to its sex.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Morgan deduced that
– eye color is linked to
sex AND
– the gene for eye color
is only located on
the X chromosome.
– Sex-Linked Genes
Fig. 15.3
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Linked Genes
• linked genes: Genes located on the
same chromosome.
• They tend to be inherited together
because the chromosome is passed
along as a unit.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Figure 15.4 Evidence for linked genes in Drosophila
Figure 15.5a Recombination due to crossing over
Genetic Recombination
• Production of offspring with new
combos of traits different from
those combos found in the parents
• Parental types
• Recombinants
• Recombinant frequency
(# recombinants/total offspring)100
• 1 map unit = 1% recombinant frequency
Genetic recombination:
• Can result from:
• 1. Independent assortment of
chromosomes (the recombination of
unlinked genes).
2. crossing over ( the recombination of
linked genes)
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Figure 15.5b Recombination due to crossing over
Recombinant Frequency
Problem
• A wild type fruit fly (heterozygous
for gray body color and red eyes)
• was mated with a black fruit fly
with purple eyes.
• What is the recombinant frequency
for these genes?
• Wild type – 721
• Black purple – 751
• Gray purple – 49
• Black red - 45
Recombinant Frequency
Problem - Answer
• Total offspring - 1566
• Parental types – 1472
• Recombinants – 94
• Frequency = 94/1566 *100
= 6.0%
Recap-Morgan’s test-cross
(2 traits)
• Most of the F2 offspring looked like
the parents( because the genes were
linked-same chromosome)
• Explaining why the were greater
number of recombinant phenotypes
(resulted from some other force of
nature-----crossing over)
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
– Under independent assortment (genes
not linked) the testcross should
produce a 1:1:1:1 phenotypic ratio.
– If completely linked, we should expect to
see a 1:1:0:0 ratio with only parental
phenotypes among offspring.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
5. Mapping chromosomes
• Alfred Sturtevant
• Linkage map: a
genetic map (GENES
& THEIR RELATIVE
LOCTIONS) based
upon recombination
frequencies.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• The farther apart two genes are,
the higher the probability that a
crossover will occur between
them & therefore a higher
recombination frequency.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• A linkage map provides an imperfect
picture of a chromosome.
– Map units indicate relative distance
and order, not precise locations of
genes.
• Cytological maps.
– These indicated the positions of genes with
respect to chromosomal features.-like banding
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
three fruit fly genes, body color (b), wing size
(vg), and eye color (cn).
– The recombination frequency between cn and b is 9%.
– The recombination frequency between cn and vg is
9.5%.
– The recombination frequency between b and vg is 17%
Fig. 15.6
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Map units: the distance between
genes
• 1 map unit =1% recombination
frequency
• Centimorgan
• relative distance and order, not
precise locations of genes.
–.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Practice: Interactive Question
15.2 from student work book
• Recombination frequencies for gene
pairs. Create linkage map, show
map units between gene loci.
• J,k 12%
• J,m 9%
• K,l 6%
• l,m 15%
answer
K
L
6
J
6
M
9
• Some genes on a chromosome are so
far apart that a crossover between
them is virtually certain.
• Frequency of recombination
reaches has a maximum value of
50%
• Same as recom. Freq. as if found on
separate chromosomes, and are
inherited independently.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Homework for Wednesday, Jan 30
• P. 285: problems 4 and 7
• In Student Study Guide:
– Interactive questions: 15.2, 15.3, 15.4
– Test your Knowledge:2, 6, 7, 20
CHAPTER 15
THE CHROMOSOMAL BASIS OF
INHERITANCE
Section B: Sex Chromosomes
1. The chromosomal basis of sex varies with the organism
2. Sex-linked genes have unique patterns of inheritance
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
The chromosomal basis of sex
varies with the organism
1. In the X-Y system, X and Y rarely
undergo crossing over.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• 2. X-0 system
– some insects:
– XX=female; XO-male
• Z-W system
– Birds:
– females determine sex
ZZ-male; ZW-females
• the haplo-diploid system:
– Bees, ants: no sex chromosomesFemales develop from fertilized
eggs (2n);
Males from unfert. eggs
(haploid)
Fig. 15.8
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• In humans, the anatomical signs of
sex first appear when the embryo is
about two months old.
• In individuals with the SRY gene (sexdetermining region of the Y
chromosome), the generic embryonic
gonads are modified into testes.
– Activity of the SRY gene triggers a cascade of
biochemical, physiological, and anatomical
features because it regulates many other
genes.
– In addition, other genes on the Y chromosome
are necessary for the production of functional
sperm.
• In individuals lacking the SRY gene, the generic
embryonic gonads develop into ovaries.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
The Chromosomal Basis of Sex in
Humans
• Males-heterogametic (XY)
• Females homogametic ( XX)
• Whether an embryo develops into male of
female depends upon the Y chromosome.
• SRY gene
– Required for testicular development
– Protein product regulates many other genes
– SRY absent-gonads develop into ovaries
2. Sex-linked genes have unique
patterns of inheritance
Fig. 15.9
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Sex-linked traits
• Males are hemizygous
–More males than females
have sex-linked disorders
• Sex-linked disorders
• 1. Duchenne muscular dystrophy
affects one in 3,500 males born in the United States.
– rarely live past their early 20s.
– absence key muscle protein, called
dystrophin.
– progressive weakening of the muscles
and a loss of coordination.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• 2.Hemophilia
• recessive
• absence of one or more clotting
proteins
• prolonged bleeding
– Bleeding in muscles and joints can be
painful and lead to serious damage.
– treated with intravenous injections of the
missing protein.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
X linkage problem
• . Hemophilia in humans is inherited
as an X linked recessive trait. A
woman whose father is hemophiliac
marries a man with normal clotting
ability. What is the probability that
her first child will have hemophilia?
Assume that the woman's mother is
homozygous dominant.
X-Inactivation in Females
Compensating for the missing X.
Lyon Hypothesis:
In female mammals, only one X is
fully functional
• Barr body
–Inactive X chromosome (random)
–condenses
–Reactivated in gonadal cells at
meiosis
–Females are mosaics
• Mosaic of inactive maternal and paternal X chromosomes
(calico cats)
• In humans, this mosaic pattern is
evident in women who are
heterozygous for a X-linked mutation
that prevents the development of
sweat glands.
– A heterozygous woman will have patches
of normal skin and skin patches lacking
sweat glands.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
X-inactivation Produces
Tortoiseshell Cats
• X-linked system with two alleles
– heterozygous females express both alleles in a
mosaic pattern, depending on active gene
Figure 15.10x Calico cat
CHROMOSOMAL BASIS OF
INHERITANCE:
ERRORS AND EXCEPTIONS
Nondisjunction and Abnormal
Chromosome Numbers
• aneuploidy (an abnormal
chromosome number)
– normal gamete fuses with a gamete
from a nondisjunction (effect usually
severe)
– trisomic 2n + 1 total chromosomes
– monosomic 2n - 1 chromosomes.
• Nondisjunction spindle incorrectly
separates chromosome during
karyokinesis
• usually lethal
Polypoidy
• more than two complete sets of
chromosomes (effect often less
severe)
• usually occurs when a normal gamete
fertilizes another gamete in which there
has been nondisjunction of all its
chromosomes
– produces a triploid (3n) zygote (2n + 1n)
Polyploid is Common in Plants,
but Rare in Animals
• polyploidy plays an important role in
the evolution of plants
– economically important
– at least one species of
rodent may be a product of polyploidy
• Polyploids are more nearly
• normal in phenotype than
Abnormal Chromosome
Numbers and Human
Disorders
• most aneuploid zygotes are non-viable,
and spontaneously abort early in
development
– developmental problems result from an
imbalance among gene products
• certain aneuploid conditions upset the
balance less, survive to term and
beyond
– individuals have a set of symptoms - a
syndrome - characteristic of the type of
Down Syndrome
• trisomy 21, three copies of
chromosome 21
– affects one in 700 children born in U.S.
• severely alters an individual’s
phenotype in specific ways.
Incidence of Trisomy Increases
with Age in Women
• usually result from nondisjunction
during gamete production in one
parent
• frequency of Down syndrome
correlates with age of mother
– possible spindle checkpoint association
• incidence of other trisomies also
increase with maternal age, but are
usually lethal if autosomal
Nondisjunction of Sex
Chromosomes
• produces a variety of viable aneuploid
conditions in humans
• unlike autosomes, aneuploidy in
sex chromosomes upsets genetic
balance less severely.
– may be because Y chromosome
contains relatively few genes
– extra copies of X chromosome become
inactivated as Barr bodies in somatic
cells
XX or XY Nondisjuntions
• XXY males Klinefelter’s syndrome,
(1/2000)
– sterile individuals with male sex organs
– may be feminized. They are of normal
intelligence
• XYY males often taller than average
• XXX females Trisomy X (1/2000)
– produces healthy females
• XO females Turner’s syndrome (1/5000)
– produces phenotypic, but immature females
Structural Changes in Chromosomes
Breakage of a chromosome can lead to
four types of changes in chromosome
structure.
• 1. A deletion :missing segment
-Usually lethal
• 2. A duplication: repeats a segment
• occurs when a fragment becomes
attached as an extra segment to a
sister chromatid.
Fig. 15.13a & b
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• 3. An inversion occurs when a
chromosomal fragment reattaches to
the original chromosome but in the
reverse orientation.
• 4. In translocation, a chromosomal
fragment joins a nonhomologous
chromosome.
Fig. 15.13c & d
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Deletions and duplications are common
in meiosis.
– Homologous chromatids may break and
rejoin at incorrect places, such that one
chromatid will lose more genes than it
receives.
•.
– Duplications and translocations are
typically harmful.
• Reciprocal translocation or inversion
can alter phenotype because a gene’s
expression is influenced by its location.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Structural Changes and
Human Disorders
• cri du chat syndrome caused by a
specific deletion in chromosome 5
– mentally handicapped, small head,
unusual facial features, cry sounds like
the meowing of a distressed cat.
– fatal in infancy or early childhood
Genomic Imprinting
• a gene on one homologous
chromosome is silenced, other is
expressed
• effects of alleles on offspring, depend
on whether they arrive in zygote via
ovum or via sperm
Genomic
Imprinting is
Reset Each
Generation
• each new generation, all
imprints are “erased” in
gamete-producing cells.
• chromosomes are all
“reimprinted” according
to individuals sex
Prader-Willi and Angelman
Syndromes
• both due to a deletion of a specific
segment of chromosome 15
• different phenotypic effects are due to
genomic imprinting
– Prader-Willi syndrome, mental retardation, obesity, short
stature, and unusually small hands and feet
• abnormal chromosome from their father.
– Angelman syndrome, spontaneous laughter, jerky
movements, and other motor and mental symptoms
• abnormal chromosome from mother
Fragile X Syndrome
• syndrome is more common when
abnormal X chromosome is inherited
from mother
• higher frequency in males
• various degrees of mental retardation
– abnormal X chromosome in which tip
hangs on by a thin thread of DNA.
– disorder affects 1/1,500 males and
1/2,500 females
3. Extranuclear genes exhibit a nonMendelian pattern of inheritance
• Not all of a eukaryote cell’s genes are
located in the nucleus.
• Extranuclear genes are found on small
circles of DNA in mitochondria and
chloroplasts.
• These organelles reproduce
themselves.
• Their cytoplasmic genes do not display
Mendelian inheritance.
– They are not distributed to offspring
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Karl Correns first observed
cytoplasmic genes in plants in 1909.
• He determined that the coloration of
the offspring was determined only by
the maternal parent.
• These coloration patterns are due to
genes in the plastids which are
inherited only via the ovum, not the
pollen.
Fig. 15.16
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
• Because a zygote inherits all its
mitochondria only from the ovum,
all mitochondrial genes in
mammals demonstrate maternal
inheritance.
• Several rare human disorders are
produced by mutations to
mitochondrial DNA.
– These primarily impact ATP supply by
producing defects in the electron
transport chain or ATP synthase.
– Tissues that require high energy supplies
(for example, the nervous system and
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
believed to have affected
Abraham Lincoln.
Marfan syndrome is an
autosomal dominant
disorder that has been
linked to the FBN1 gene on
chromosome 15. FBN1
encodes a protein called
fibrillin, which is essential
for the formation of elastic
fibres found in connective
tissue. Without the
structural
support provided by fibrillin,
many tissues are
weakened, which can have
severe consequences,
for example, ruptures in the
walls of major arteries.
Marfan