Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Complex Inheritance Mendel observed monogenic traits and no linked genes…It s not usually that simple…. Other Types of Inheritance Incomplete Dominance – – – The phenotype of the heterozygote is intermediate between phenotypes of the homozygotes Example: when a homozygous red carnation is crossed with a homozygous white carnations, then pink carnations are produced We usually don t use lower case letters in this type of inheritance because nothing is really dominant Incomplete Dominance RR = Red RW= pink WW= white Incomplete Dominance Punnett Square Pink x White RW x WW – 50% offspring are pink – 50% are white RW RW WW WW Other Types of Inheritance Codominance – Occurs when both alleles for a trait are expressed in heterozygous offspring – Codominant alleles are often symbolized with different letters Codominance BB = Brown BW= Roan WW= White Notice both brown and white are present in the heterozygote Codominance Punnett Square Roan x Roan BW x BW – 25% brown – 50% roan – 25% white BB BW BW WW Other Types of Inheritance Multiple Alleles: – Genes with 3 or more alleles (or variations) – Human blood type shows codominance and it has multiple alleles- A, B, and O Blood Type Human blood types have 3 alleles A, B, and O. – Each person still only gets 2 alleles, but there are 3 possibilities – O is recessive to A and B, – A and B are codominant: – Genotype AO or AA = A blood – Genotype BO or BB = B blood – Genotype OO = O blood – Genotype AB = AB blood (both alleles expressed) Blood Type Blood Type Terminology GENOTYPE Heterozygous B BO Heterozygous A AO Homozygous recessive OO Homozygous A AA Homozygous B BB AB (technically heterozygous) AB Codominance Punnett Square Heterozygous A x Heterozygous B AO x BO – 25% AB – 25% A blood – 25% B blood – 25% O blood AB BO AO OO Other Types of Inheritance Sex-Linked Genes and Traits – Remember sex chromosomes are the chromosomes that determine the sex of an organism – So these are traits/genes carried on sex chromosomes – These traits are symbolized using a superscript on the X or Y, such as Xr or XR Other Types of Inheritance Sex-Linked Genes and Traits Examples: – In fruit flies, the gene for eye color is on the X chromosome. Red (XR) is dominant, white (Xr) is recessive. – To have white eyes, females must have the genotype Xr Xr , or in other words TWO white alleles – To have white eyes, males must have the genotype Xr Y, or in other words ONE white allele – This is why X chromosome sex-linked traits are more common in males Sex-linked Punnett Square Homozygous red eyed female x white eyed male XRXR x XrY Notice, 50% males and 50% females for offspring All offspring will have red eyes XRXr XRY XRXr XRY Other Types of Inheritance Polygenic Inheritance: – Traits that are controlled by more than one gene – Most human traits are polygenic – Examples are height, skin color, eye color, and hair color Other Types of Inheritance Complex Characters: – Characters that are influenced by genetics AND the environment – Skin color and height are examples Other Types of Inheritance Sex-Influenced Traits: – Traits in which males and females show different phenotypes even though they have the same genotypes – Baldness is an example- it is dominant in men, but recessive in women – The differences are mainly due to males and females producing different hormones (chemical signals) Other Types of Inheritance Single Allele Traits – Traits where there is only one allele – If you have the allele you have the traitthere is no recessive – Huntington s disease is an example http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases- conditions/huntingtons-disease/basics/ definition/con-20030685 Chromosome Mutations Chromosome mutations involve changes in the structure of a chromosome or the loss or gain of a chromosome. – Deletion: The loss of a piece of chromosome due to breakage – Inversion: A chromosomal segment breaks off, flips around, and reattaches Translocation- A piece of chromosome breaks off and reattached to a nonhomologous chromosome Nondisjunction- When a chromosome fails to detach from its homologue during meiosis, so one gamete gets an extra chromosome ex. Down’s Syndrome http://www.nichd.nih.gov/health/topics/down/conditioninfo/Pages/causes.aspx Duplication: repeats a chromosomal segment