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X-Linked Traits
Biology
Unit 6
Velekei
Genetics of Sex
 In humans & other mammals, there are 2 sex
chromosomes: X & Y
 2 X chromosomes
 develop as a female: XX
 gene redundancy,
like autosomal chromosomes
 an X & Y chromosome
X
Y
X
XX
XY
X
XX
XY
 develop as a male: XY
 no redundancy
50% female : 50% male
Genes on sex chromosomes
 Y chromosome
 few genes other than SRY
 sex-determining region
 master regulator for maleness
 turns on genes for production of male hormones

many effects = pleiotropy!
 X chromosome
 other genes/traits beyond sex determination
 mutations:



hemophilia
Duchenne muscular dystrophy
color-blindness
Human X chromosome
 Sex-linked
 usually means
“X-linked”
 more than
60 diseases traced to
genes on X
chromosome
Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Becker muscular dystrophy
Chronic granulomatous disease
Retinitis pigmentosa-3
Norrie disease
Retinitis pigmentosa-2
Ichthyosis, X-linked
Placental steroid sulfatase deficiency
Kallmann syndrome
Chondrodysplasia punctata,
X-linked recessive
Hypophosphatemia
Aicardi syndrome
Hypomagnesemia, X-linked
Ocular albinism
Retinoschisis
Adrenal hypoplasia
Glycerol kinase deficiency
Ornithine transcarbamylase
deficiency
Incontinentia pigmenti
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
Menkes syndrome
Androgen insensitivity
Sideroblastic anemia
Aarskog-Scott syndrome
PGK deficiency hemolytic anemia
Anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia
Agammaglobulinemia
Kennedy disease
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease
Alport syndrome
Fabry disease
Immunodeficiency, X-linked,
with hyper IgM
Lymphoproliferative syndrome
Albinism-deafness syndrome
Fragile-X syndrome
Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy
Choroideremia
Cleft palate, X-linked
Spastic paraplegia, X-linked,
uncomplicated
Deafness with stapes fixation
PRPS-related gout
Lowe syndrome
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
HPRT-related gout
Hunter syndrome
Hemophilia B
Hemophilia A
G6PD deficiency: favism
Drug-sensitive anemia
Chronic hemolytic anemia
Manic-depressive illness, X-linked
Colorblindness, (several forms)
Dyskeratosis congenita
TKCR syndrome
Adrenoleukodystrophy
Adrenomyeloneuropathy
Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy
Diabetes insipidus, renal
Myotubular myopathy, X-linked
Sex-linked Genes
 Genes on the X chromosome are called “sex-
linked”, because they expressed more often in
males than in females
 There are very few genes on the Y chromosome.
 Since males only have one X chromosome, all
genes on it, whether dominant or recessive, are
expressed.
Sex-linked Genes
 In contrast, a mutant gene on an X chromosome in a
female is usually covered up by the normal allele on the
other X. Most mutations are recessive. So, most
people with sex-linked genetic conditions are
male.
 Another fact about sex-linked genes. Males produce ½
their sperm with their X chromosome, and half with
their Y chromosome. The X-bearing sperm lead to
daughters and the Y-bearing sperm lead to sons. So, sons
get their only X from their mothers, and the father’s X
goes only to daughters.
 The Y chromosome is passed from father to son.
Why can females have 2 copies of the X
chromosome, when males only have 1?
 Answer:
In each cell one of the X chromosomes ‘turns off’.
This turned off chromosome is known as a Barr
body.
The effect of Barr bodies can be seen in Calico
colored cats.
X-inactivation
 Female mammals inherit 2 X chromosomes
 one X becomes inactivated during embryonic
development
 condenses into compact object = Barr body
 which X becomes Barr body is random

patchwork trait = “mosaic”
patches of black
XH 
XH Xh
tricolor cats
can only be
female
Xh
patches of orange
Colorblindness
 We have 3 color receptors in the retinas of our eyes.
They respond best to red, green, and blue light.
 Each receptor is made by a gene. The blue receptor is
on an autosome, while the red and green receptors are
on the X chromosome (sex-linked).
Colorblindness
 Most colorblind people are males, who have
mutated, inactive versions of either the red or
the green (sometimes both) color receptors.
Most females with a mutant receptor gene are
heterozygous: the normal version of the receptor
genes gives them normal color vision.
Colorblind Test!
 You will see circles with many colors of
dots
 The dot pattern makes up a number
 What number do you see?
With Color Vision:
This one you can even see in black and
white
Color Blind Test
What
number
do you
see?
Color Blind Test
What
number
do you
see?
This what you would see if you were
color blind
What
number
do you
see?
Color Blind Test
What
number
do you
see?
Color Blind Test
What
number
do you
see?
Color Blind Test
What
number
do you
see?
Color Blind Test
What
number
do you
see?
With color vision you see this:
But if you were red-green colorblind….
You would see the #:
5
What do the colorblind see?
Types of Colorblindness
NORMAL
RED
YELLOW
GREEN
CYAN
BLUE
MAGENTA
PROTAN:
DEUTERAN:
TRITAN:
Red Blind
Green Blind
Blue Blind
Types of Colorblindness –
Normal
Protanopia: no red
No color vision
Deuteranopia: no green
Tritanopia: no blue
How to write Alleles for X-Linked Traits
 Women:
Normal: XBXB
Carrier: XBXb
Colorblind: XbXb
 Men:
Normal: XBY
Colorblind: XbY
Hemophilia
 Hemophilia is a disease in which the blood does not clot when
exposed to air. People with hemophilia can easily bleed to death
from very minor wounds. Hemophilia is another sex-linked
trait.
 Hemophilia is treated by injecting the proper clotting proteins,
isolated from the blood of normal people. In the early 1980’s,
the blood supply was contaminated by HIV, the AIDS virus, and
many hemophiliacs contracted AIDS at that time.
 Small cuts, scrapes and bruises can be life threatening
 1 in 10, 000 males
 1 in 100,000,000 females
sex-linked recessive
Hemophilia
Hh
XHXhx HH
XH Y
XH
female / eggs
male / sperm
XH
XH
Y
XH XH
XHY
XH Xh
Xh
XH
Xh
XH Xh
carrier
Xh Y
disease
XHY
Y
Common amongst royalty in Europe
Queen Victoria
= Carrier
Sex-Influenced Traits
 Some traits appear to be specific to one
sex, but are not sex-linked: their genes
are not on the X chromosome. It is
sex-influenced.
 The best human example is male
pattern baldness.
 Baldness is dominant in males:
heterozygotes and homozygotes both
become bald. In females, baldness is
recessive: only homozygotes (which are
relatively rare) become bald. Also,
females tend to lose hair more evenly
than men, giving a sparse hair pattern
rather than completely baldness.
Errors of Meiosis
Chromosomal Abnormalities
Chromosomal abnormalities
 Incorrect number of chromosomes
nondisjunction
 chromosomes don’t separate properly during
meiosis
breakage of chromosomes
 deletion
 duplication
 inversion
 translocation
Nondisjunction
 Problems with meiotic spindle cause errors in daughter cells
 homologous chromosomes do not separate properly during Meiosis
1
 sister chromatids fail to separate during Meiosis 2
 too many or too few chromosomes
2n
n-1
n
n+1
n
Alteration of chromosome number
error in Meiosis 1
error in Meiosis 2
all with incorrect number
1/2 with incorrect number
Nondisjunction
 Baby has wrong chromosome number
 trisomy
 cells have 3 copies of a chromosome
 monosomy
 cells have only 1 copy of a chromosome
n+1
n
n-1
n
trisomy
monosomy
2n+1
2n-1
Down syndrome
 Trisomy 21
 3 copies of chromosome 21
 1 in 700 children born in U.S.
 Chromosome 21 is the
smallest human chromosome
 but still severe effects
 Frequency of Down
syndrome correlates
with the age of the mother
Sex chromosomes abnormalities
 Human development more tolerant of wrong
numbers in sex chromosome
 But produces a variety of distinct syndromes in
humans
 XXY = Klinefelter’s syndrome male
 XXX = Trisomy X female
 XYY = Jacob’s syndrome male
 XO = Turner syndrome female
Klinefelter’s syndrome
 XXY male
 one in every 2000 live births
 have male sex organs, but are sterile
 feminine characteristics
 some breast development
 lack of facial hair
 tall
 normal intelligence
Klinefelter’s syndrome
Jacob’s syndrome male
 XYY Males
 1 in 1000 live male
births
 extra Y chromosome
 slightly taller than
average
 more active
 normal intelligence, slight learning disabilities
 delayed emotional maturity
 normal sexual development
Trisomy X
 XXX
 1 in every 2000 live births
 produces healthy females
 Why?
 Barr bodies
 all but one X chromosome is inactivated
Turner syndrome
 Monosomy X or X0
 1 in every 5000 births
 varied degree of effects
 webbed neck
 short stature
 sterile
Changes in chromosome structure
error of
replication
 deletion
 loss of a chromosomal segment
 duplication
 repeat a segment
 inversion
error of
crossing over
 reverses a segment
 translocation
 move segment from one chromosome to another
A few oddities
 It is possible to be XY and female. Two ways this can happen:

1. the SRY gene can be inactivated by a mutation. If SRY
doesn’t work, testes don’t develop and the embryo develops as
a normal female.

2. In a condition called “androgen insensitivity”, the person
is XY with a functional SRY gene, but her cells lack the
testosterone receptor protein, so the cells don’t ever get the
message that the testosterone is sending. Testes develop in the
abdominal cavity, and no ovaries, fallopian tubes, or uterus
develop. At puberty, the internal testes secrete testosterone,
which gets converted into estrogen and the body develops as a
normal (but sterile) adult female.
Hermaphrodites ?!?
 Hermaphrodite: An individual that
has all female reproductive parts, and
all male reproductive parts
 No such thing in Humans
Hermaphrodites
In some cases, the cells respond a little bit to testosterone
produced by the testes. The embryo develops with ambiguous
genitalia, neither completely male not completely female.
Another condition, congenital adrenal dysplasia, causes the
adrenal glands to produce an abnormally large amount of
testosterone in a female embryo, This can also cause
development of ambiguous genitalia.
 Another rare condition: a chimera occurs when two separate
embryos fuse together. This can result in a person with some
XX cells and some XY cells. This condition is extremely rare:
more people say they have it than actually do.
Twins
 2% of births
 Monozygotic (Identical) 30% of twins
A single zygote splits into two. This happens between 1 to 9 days after the zygote forms.
The twins share the same genome
 Dizygotic (Fraternal) 70% of twins
Two separate eggs are fertilized with two separate sperm. Two totally independent
zygotes are created.
The twins have different genomes
 Conjoined twins – very rare (1 in 200,000)
Identical twins who fail to completely separate after the 13th day after fertilization
This may be due to the fusion, or incomplete separation of zygotes
May be two fully formed individuals connected at various locations, or rarely, parasitic
twins, where one is much smaller and less formed, or even completely contained.