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Other Patterns of Inheritance Other Patterns of Inheritance are Exceptions to Mendel’s Laws Law of Dominance: if the 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 Law of Segregation: the two alleles for a heritable character separate (segregate) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes Law of Independent Assortment: each pair of alleles segregates independently of other pairs of alleles during gamete formation Codominance • The heterozygote expresses both alleles at the same time. • In this example, the heterozygous cattle are roan. They express both hair colors at the same time. Red “Roan” White R R CC x R R CC W W C C x W W C C R W CC x R W CC R R CC x R W CC R R CC x W W C C R W CC x W W C C Multiple Alleles • For many genes, there are several alleles exist in the population. • This expands the number of possible genotypes and phenotypes. ABO Blood Types A B I I x ii x Dihybrid Cross • The mating of two organisms that differ in two characters. Sample Two-Factor Cross Problem • In pea plants, green pods (G) are dominant over yellow pods (g), and smooth pods (N) are dominant over constricted pods (n). A plant heterozygous for both traits is crossed with a plant that has yellow constricted pods. What are the probable genotypes and phenotypes for this cross? Step 1 • Choose letters to represent the genes in the cross. G = green pods g = yellow pods N = smooth pods n = constricted pods Step 2 • Write the genotypes of the parents GgNn X ggnn Step 3 • Determine the possible gametes that the parents can produce (FOIL) GgNn GN Gn gN gn ggnn gn gn gn gn Step 4 • Enter the possible gametes at the top and side of the Punnett square. GgNn X ggnn gn gn gn gn GN Gn gN gn Step 5 • Complete the Punnett square by writing the alleles from the gametes in the appropriate boxes. GgNn X ggnn GN Gn gN gn gn GgNn Ggnn ggNn ggnn gn GgNn Ggnn ggNn ggnn gn GgNn Ggnn ggNn ggnn gn GgNn Ggnn ggNn ggnn Step 6 • Determine the genotypes and phenotypes of the offspring. Genotypes • • • • GgNn 4/16 – 25% Ggnn 4/16 – 25% ggNn 4/16 – 25% ggnn 4/16 – 25% Phenotypes • • • • Green smooth: 4/16 – 25% Green constricted: 4/16 – 25% Yellow smooth: 4/16 – 25% Yellow constricted: 4/16 – 25% Incomplete Dominance • The heterozygote has a phenotype that is intermediate between the phenotypes of the two homozygotes. • Example: Petal color in certain flowers. Epistasis • • Effects of one gene override or mask the phenotype of a second gene. Epistasis is not dominance. Compare the definitions: Epistasis: One gene masks the expression of a different gene for a different trait Dominance: One allele masks the expression of another allele of the same gene Example of Epistasis • Labrador retrievers can be black, brown, or yellow. Two genes control this. • One gene influences melanin production o B (black) is dominant to b (brown) • One gene influences melanin deposition o E (full deposition) is dominant to (reduced deposition) e Sex-Linked Inheritance • Genes located on sex chromosomes produce different patterns in males and females. • Females generally have two alleles for these genes. • Males generally have only one allele. • If a male inherits a sex-linked recessive allele from his mother, the allele will be expressed. Red/Green Color Blindness X Chromosome Inactivation • At a certain point in the embryonic Barr body development of every female mammal, one of the two X chromosomes in each cell inactivates by supercoiling into a structure known as a Barr Body. • This irreversible process leaves only one active X chromosome in each cell, and which X chromosome undergoes inactivation is random with respect to the cell lineages that result from future cell divisions. • If the female is heterozygous, an interesting pattern can result. In cats, one of several genes controlling fur color is located on the X chromosome. The gene has two alleles. One form of the gene codes for orange fur (XB), and the other form codes for black fur (Xb). The orange allele is dominant to the black allele. Ordinarily, this would mean that an animal inheriting one copy of each gene should have orange fur. However, a heterozygous female cat (XBXb) will not be orange. Instead, her coat will be a patchwork of orange and black, a condition known as tortoiseshell. This pattern is due to the random nature of X chromosome inactivation. World’s first cloned cat! Rainbow CC CC and her surrogate mother Pleiotropy • The control by a single gene of several distinct and seemingly unrelated phenotypic effects. o This occurs because the protein products of most genes are expressed in more than one cell type, meaning they participate in more than one physiological or developmental process. • Example: sickle cell anemia Sickle Cell Anemia Develops in persons carrying two defective alleles for a blood protein, beta-hemoglobin. Mutant beta-hemoglobins are misaligned inside a blood cell and cause misshapen red blood cells at low oxygen concentrations. Deformed blood cells impair circulation. Impaired circulation damages kidneys and bone. In this case, the gene defect itself only affects one tissue, the blood. The consequences of that defect are found in other tissues and organs. Polygenic Inheritance • Multiple genes influence a single trait. Continuous variation • Most traits show a range of variation rather than distinct either/or types • This occurs when multiple genes and environmental factors influence the trait’s expression • Continuous variation is often described with frequency distribution tables. Example using actual data Autosomal Linkage • Genes located on the same chromosome that tend to be inherited together in genetic crosses are said to be linked genes. • When genes are linked, they do not assort independently. Why did Mendel miss it? • Mendel did not notice linkage because seven of the characters he studied in the garden pea were located on different (non-homologous) chromosomes. • Seed color and flower color are in the same chromosome, but they lie so far apart that they almost always get separated by crossing over and assort independently. Calculating Map Distance • When genes are linked, the offspring of a testcross involving an individual heterozygous for each of two genes will not exhibit a 1:1:1:1 phenotypic ratio expected for independently assorting genes. Instead, there will be an excess of the parental phenotypes. • Results of such testcrosses can be used to calculate the map distance between the two genes involved. • Map distance is calculated from the formula for recombination frequency: recombination frequency = number of recombinants x 100 (map units) total offspring Sample Problem Sample Problem Gene Mapping Problem • • • • • • • Genes A-B 10 map units Genes B-C 3 map units Genes D-B 5 map units Genes C-E 2 map units Genes A-D 5 map units Genes B-E 5 map units Genes D-E 10 map units Gene Mapping Problem