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Genetics Toby Dylan Hocking based on lectures by Sharon Amacher Tom Kline Fyodor Urnov Molecular and Cell Biology 140 UC Berkeley Spring Semester 2005 May 16, 2005 2 Contents 1 Classical and Molecular Genetics 1.1 Mitosis and Meiosis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.1.1 Stages of the Cell Cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.1.2 Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.1.3 Phases of Mitosis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.1.4 Phases of Meiosis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.1.5 Comparing Mitosis and Meiosis . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.2 Background of Mendel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.3 Elementary Genetic Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.3.1 Monohybrid Cross . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.3.2 Dihybrid Cross . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.3.3 Test Cross . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4 Complications to Basic Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.1 Incomplete Dominance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.2 Codominance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.4.3 Recessive Lethality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5 Sex Determination Proves Chromosomal Inheritance . . . . . 1.5.1 Sex Detemination Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5.2 Nomenclature in Drosophila . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5.3 Establishing Sex Linkage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5.4 Primary Nondisjunction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5.5 2◦ Nondisjunction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.5.6 Barred Phenotype Crosses Reveal Meiosis I as Point of Nondisjunction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.6 Pedigree Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.6.1 Autosomal Dominant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.6.2 Autosomal Recessive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 9 9 9 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 14 14 15 15 15 16 16 17 17 . . . . 18 18 18 19 4 CONTENTS 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.6.3 X-Linked Recessive . . . . . . . . . . . 1.6.4 X-Linked Dominant . . . . . . . . . . . Linkage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.7.1 X-Linked Mutant Cross . . . . . . . . 1.7.2 Autosomal Mutant Cross . . . . . . . . 1.7.3 χ2 Test of Linkage . . . . . . . . . . . 1.7.4 Summary of Linkage . . . . . . . . . . Genetic Mapping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.8.1 Mapping 5 Genes With 2-Point Crosses 1.8.2 Mapping 3 Genes With 3-Point Crosses 1.8.3 Interference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tetrad Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.9.1 Fungi As A Model . . . . . . . . . . . 1.9.2 Meiosis in S. cerevisiae . . . . . . . . . 1.9.3 Genetics of S. cerevisiae . . . . . . . . 1.9.4 Recombination Frequency . . . . . . . 1.9.5 Neurospora crassa . . . . . . . . . . . Recombination Mechanisms . . . . . . . . . . 1.10.1 Physical Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . 1.10.2 Breaking and Rejoining . . . . . . . . . 1.10.3 Gene Conversion . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.10.4 Models of Recombination . . . . . . . . Pathway Dissections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.11.1 One Gene-One Protein . . . . . . . . . 1.11.2 Arg Mutants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Complementation Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zebrafish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.13.1 Modeling Development . . . . . . . . . 1.13.2 Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.13.3 Alternate Complementation Test . . . 1.13.4 Haploid Embryos . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.13.5 Expression Screen . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.13.6 Half Tetrads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chromosomal Rearrangements . . . . . . . . . 1.14.1 Origins of Mutations . . . . . . . . . . 1.14.2 Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Deletions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.15.1 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 21 21 21 22 23 24 24 24 25 26 27 27 27 27 28 30 30 30 31 31 32 33 34 34 35 36 36 36 37 37 37 37 38 38 39 39 39 CONTENTS 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 5 1.15.2 Allele Screens . . . . . . . . . 1.15.3 Deletion Characteristics . . . Duplications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inversions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.17.1 Pericentric Inversion . . . . . 1.17.2 Paracentric Inversion . . . . . 1.17.3 Diagnostics for Inversions . . 1.17.4 Utility of Inversions . . . . . . Translocations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.18.1 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . 1.18.2 Diagnostics of Translocations 1.18.3 Robertsonian Translocation . Ploidy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.19.1 Terms . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.19.2 Monoploidy . . . . . . . . . . 1.19.3 Polyploidy . . . . . . . . . . . 1.19.4 Autotetraploidy . . . . . . . . 1.19.5 Allotetraploidy . . . . . . . . 1.19.6 Aneuploidy . . . . . . . . . . Organelle Genetics . . . . . . . . . . 1.20.1 Mitochondrial DNA . . . . . . 1.20.2 Chloroplast DNA . . . . . . . 1.20.3 Bacterial Similarities . . . . . 1.20.4 Four O’ Clocks . . . . . . . . 1.20.5 Xenopus . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.20.6 Cultivating cpDNA . . . . . . 1.20.7 LHON . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.20.8 Chlamydamonas . . . . . . . . 1.20.9 Yeast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.20.10 Diagnostics . . . . . . . . . . 2 Genetics in Society 2.1 The Human Genome . . . . . . . 2.1.1 Size . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1.2 Repetition . . . . . . . . . 2.1.3 Contructing Genome Maps 2.1.4 Chromosomal Maps . . . . 2.1.5 Linkage Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 40 41 41 41 42 42 42 43 43 44 44 44 44 45 45 45 46 46 47 47 47 47 48 48 48 49 49 49 50 . . . . . . 51 51 51 52 52 53 53 6 CONTENTS 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.1.6 Radiation Hybrid Maps . . . . . . 2.1.7 DNA Fingerprinting . . . . . . . . 2.1.8 The Genome Projects . . . . . . . . 2.1.9 Other Projects . . . . . . . . . . . Human Disease Genes . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.1 Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.2 Alkaptonura . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.3 Sickle Cell Anemia . . . . . . . . . 2.2.4 Mouse Models . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.5 Human Crosses? . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.6 Carrier Screening . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.7 X-Linked SCIDs . . . . . . . . . . . Cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3.1 Retinoblastoma . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3.2 Alterations in Cancer Cells . . . . . 2.3.3 Heterogeneity of Cancer . . . . . . 2.3.4 Genetic Cancer Causation . . . . . 2.3.5 Cell Division Cycle . . . . . . . . . 2.3.6 Oncogenes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3.7 Tumor Suppressors . . . . . . . . . Genetics of Human Diversity . . . . . . . . 2.4.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4.2 Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4.3 Race-Based Medicine? . . . . . . . Inheritance of Quantitative Traits . . . . . 2.5.1 Pseudoscience . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5.2 Quantitative Traits . . . . . . . . . Bacterial Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6.1 Classical Genetics . . . . . . . . . . 2.6.2 Rise of Molecular Genetics . . . . . 2.6.3 Bacterial Virus Resistance . . . . . 2.6.4 One Gene-One Enzyme Hypothesis 2.6.5 The Operon . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6.6 Cis-Trans Test . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6.7 Determining the Suppressor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 54 54 55 55 55 56 56 56 57 57 58 58 58 59 59 60 60 61 62 63 63 64 65 66 66 67 69 69 69 70 71 72 73 73 CONTENTS 3 Analysis Techniques 3.1 Themes in Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.2 Distinctions . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.3 Relevance of the Mendelian Test . 3.2 Viral Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.2 T4 Plaque Morphology . . . . . . 3.2.3 Viral Complementation . . . . . . 3.2.4 Reverting the Dominance . . . . 3.3 Importance of Mutations . . . . . . . . . 3.3.1 Benzer’s Deductions . . . . . . . 3.3.2 Deletion Mapping . . . . . . . . . 3.3.3 Mutagenesis . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4 Mutation Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.1 Kline’s Sex Lethal . . . . . . . . 3.4.2 Amorphic . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.3 Hypomorphic . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.4 Hypermorphic . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.5 Antimorphic . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.6 Neomorphic . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.7 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5 Conditional Mutations . . . . . . . . . . 3.5.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5.2 Gene and Allele Specific . . . . . 3.5.3 Gene Specific, Allele Nonspecific . 3.5.4 Gene Nonspecific, Allele Specific . 3.5.5 Temperature Sensitive . . . . . . 3.6 Mutagenesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6.2 Radiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6.3 Mobile Genetic Elements . . . . . 3.6.4 Balancer Chromosomes . . . . . . 3.7 Genetic Mosaics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7.2 Genetic Screens . . . . . . . . . . 3.7.3 Mitotic Recombination . . . . . . 3.7.4 Maternal Effect Lethality . . . . 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 75 75 75 76 77 77 77 77 78 78 78 79 80 81 81 81 81 82 82 84 84 85 85 85 86 86 87 89 89 89 90 91 91 91 92 92 93 8 CONTENTS 3.8 Transient Phenocopies . . . . . . . . . . 3.8.1 Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.8.2 The Discovery . . . . . . . . . . . 3.8.3 Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.8.4 Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.8.5 Speculation . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.9 Sex Determination . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.9.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.9.2 Evolution of Sex . . . . . . . . . 3.9.3 The Effects of Sex . . . . . . . . 3.9.4 Environmental Sex Determination 3.9.5 Genotypic Sex Determination . . 3.9.6 Mechanisms of GSD . . . . . . . 3.10 Dosage Compensation . . . . . . . . . . 3.10.1 The Lion Hypothesis . . . . . . . 3.10.2 Defining the X Chromosome . . . 3.10.3 Noncoding RNA . . . . . . . . . 3.10.4 Exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . A Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 94 94 95 96 96 97 97 97 98 99 100 100 102 102 102 103 103 107 Chapter 1 Classical and Molecular Genetics 1.1 Mitosis and Meiosis A good understanding of meiosis can be used to derive any genetics problem. 1.1.1 Stages of the Cell Cycle The cell cycle is divided up into these stages: Mitosis (M) Gap 1 (G1) Interphase DNA Synthesis (S) Gap 2 (G2) 1.1.2 Definitions Mitosis is the process of chromosome separation in somatic cells that produces two identical daughter cells. Meiosis is the process of segregating alleles into gametes. Chromatin is loosely defined as a tangled DNA/protein complex. A Chromosome is a linear array of genes and noncoding regions. Homologous Chromosomes match in size, shape, and order of genes. Autosomes are chromosomes that do not influence sex determination. 9 10 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS Sex Chromosomes are chromosomes involved in sex determination. Chromatids are the two segments of DNA joined by a centromere near the center of the replicated chromosome. Sister Chromatids are identical DNA segments connected at a centromere that exist only after DNA replication in S phase and before cell division in mitosis. 1.1.3 Phases of Mitosis Mitosis is divided into these phases: Phase Prophase Features Chromosome condensation Nuclear envelope breakdown Metaphase Chromosomes align, unordered, on metaphase plate Anaphase Chromosomes are pulled to opposite poles Telophase Dual nuclear envelope reformation 1.1.4 Phases of Meiosis Meiosis is divided into these phases: Phase Features Prophase I Chromosome condensation Nuclear envelope breakdown Protein-mediated synapsis, crossing-over Metaphase I Synapsed chromosomes (Tetrads) align on metaphase plate Anaphase I Homologous replicated chromosomes are pulled to opposite poles Telophase I Dual nuclear envelope reformation Interkinesis Two new daughter cells form from division No new replication Prophase II Chromosome condensation Nuclear envelope breakdown Metaphase II Chromosomes align on metaphase plate Anaphase II Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite poles Telophase II Dual nuclear envelope reformation 1.2. BACKGROUND OF MENDEL 11 Note that, unlike mitosis, the products of meiosis are four haploid germ cells with new varieties of chromosomes because: 1. Random Metaphase I alignment results in independent assortment 2. Crossing-over results in new combinations of alleles on a chromosome 1.1.5 Comparing Mitosis and Meiosis Mitosis Cell Type Somatic Divisions 1 Homologous Chromosome Pairing Rarely Genetic Recombination Rarely Sister Chromatid Separation Anaphase 2 Daughter Cells Produced 1.2 Meiosis Germ 2 Always Always Anaphase II 4 Background of Mendel Gregor Mendel was an Austrian monk who established the basic laws of inheritance through radical breeding experiments with pea plants in the 1860s. At the time of his publication, there were two other prevailing theories of inheritance: 1. Blending inheritance 2. Uniparental “homunculus” inheritance Modern recognition for Mendel’s scientific success stems from his good experimental setup: 1. Pea plants were an ideal model system since they have short generation times and are capable of self-ferilization 2. Traits monitored were dichotomous and easily scorable 3. Pure-breeding lines were established so as to be confident in breeding results 4. Controlled matings did not allow any possibility of undocumented fertilization 12 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 5. Quantitative counts of bred plants resulted in clear ratios 1.3 Elementary Genetic Analysis Observing the pea plants’ Phenotypes, or observable inherited characteristics, led to the deduction of their Genotypes, or inherited genetic material. Genes are the modern name for the discrete units that Mendel observed to be inherited. Many individual varieties, or Alleles of each gene exist. For genotypes, Dominant alleles are denoted by the upper case of the first letter of the dominant phenotype. Recessive alleles are denoted by the lower case of the first letter of the dominant phenotype. The first Parental generation’s (P) offspring are referred to as the first Filial generation (F1 ). These individuals’ offspring are referred to as the second Filial generation (F2 ). “Filial” is a word defined as “of or suitable to a son or daughter.” 1.3.1 Monohybrid Cross Pure-breeding yellow plants were crossed with pure-breeding green plants. P Yellow × Green : F1 Yellow × Yellow : Yellow Yellow 3 Green 1 F1 F2 These deductions were made from the above results: 1. Two types of yellow plants exist (pure and hybrids) 2. Yellow is dominant over green in inheritance 3. Law of Segregation: The two alleles present for each trait separate during meiosis and unite randomly with an allele from another gamete at fertilization And these genotypes were deduced: P YY × yy : F1 Yy × Yy : Yy 1 YY 2 Yy 1 yy F1 F2 1.3. ELEMENTARY GENETIC ANALYSIS 1.3.2 13 Dihybrid Cross Peas purebred yellow and round were crossed with peas purebred green and wrinkled. Yellow, Round × Green, Wrinkled P F1 Yellow, Round × Yellow, Round : : 9 3 3 1 Yellow, Round Yellow, Round Yellow, Wrinkled Green, Round Green, Wrinkled F1 F2 The Law of Independent Assortment was deduced from the dihybrid cross. It states that pairs of alleles separate at meiosis and join at fertilization independent of other pairs of alleles. These genotypes were also deduced, as displayed in a Punnett square: P RY ry RYry F1 RY Ry rY ry RY RRYY RRYy RrYY RrYy Ry RRYy RRyy RrYy Rryy rY RRYY RrYy rrYY rrYy ry RrYy Rryy rrYy rryy So, in case you didn’t notice, the F2 generation genotypes occur in a ratio of 1:1:1:1:2:2:2:2:4 1.3.3 Test Cross A Test Cross is performed to determine the genotype of an individual with dominant phenotype, and is especially useful for organisms which can’t be self-fertilized. The unknown individual (A-B-) is crossed with a purebred recessive individual (aabb), and the genotype is deduced as follows: 1. If no recessive phenotype is seen in the offspring, then the unknown must be Homozygous dominant 2. If a recessive to dominant phenotype ratio of 1 : 1 emerges in the offspring, then the unknown must be Heterozygous 14 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.4 Complications to Basic Genetics The following observations contradict the simple model proposed by Mendel. 1. Incomplete dominance 2. Codominance 3. > 1 trait influenced by one gene 4. Not all genotypes are equally viable 1.4.1 Incomplete Dominance This phenomenon is marked by emergence of a novel phenotype in the F1 generation, which normally consists of dominant phenotype heterozygotes. Incomplete dominance results in expression of both dominant and expressive alleles, resulting in a blended phenotype. For example, in snapdragons, the flower color is determined by an incompletely dominant red allele: 1.4.2 P Red (RR) × White (rr) : F1 Pink (Rr) × : Pink (Rr) Pink (Rr) 1 Red (RR) 2 Pink (Rr) 1 White (rr) F1 F2 Codominance Codominance occurs when more than two alleles are present for a gene and more than one of them is dominant to another allele. This phenomenon is manifest when the F1 generation displays both parental phenotypes. For example, in humans, blood type is determined by codominant alleles: P I AI A × IBIB : F1 I AI B × I AI B : I AI B 1 I AI A 2 I AI B 1 IBIB F1 F2 1.5. SEX DETERMINATION PROVES CHROMOSOMAL INHERITANCE15 1.4.3 Recessive Lethality Recessive lethality is marked by a departure from the usual F2 phenotype ratios because homozygous recessive individuals are aborted in utero. P F1 × Yellow (AY A) : Yellow (AY A) × Yellow (AY A) : Grey (AA) 1 1 Grey (AA) Yellow (AY A) 1 Aborted (AY AY ) 2 Yellow (AY A) 1 Grey (AA) F1 F2 From the first cross, it can be deduced that: 1. A single gene with two alleles determines the yellow phenotype 2. Yellow mice must carry the Agouti allele 3. Yellow must be dominant From the second cross, it is apparent that: 1. The AY allele’s gene locus is Pleiotropic, i.e. the gene contributes to more than one phenotype 2. The AY allele is dominant in color determination but recessive in determining the lethal phenotype (hence the term Recessive lethality) 1.5 1.5.1 Sex Determination Proves Chromosomal Inheritance Sex Detemination Summary Autosomes 22 pairs 3 pairs Organism Human Drosophila Chicken Some Insects Female XX XX WZ XX Male Sex Detemination XY Presence of Y XY Number of X chromosomes ZZ XO Number of X chromosomes 16 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.5.2 Nomenclature in Drosophila 1. Gene loci are abbreviated by the first letter of the mutant phenotype. Capitalize if the mutant phenotype is dominant. 2. Denote the wild-type allele (defined as any allele with frequency > 1%) with a superscript plus (+ ) 1.5.3 Establishing Sex Linkage A mutant male fly with white eyes arose in the F2 generation in breeding experiments: P Red F × White M : F1 Red F × : Red M All Red 2 Red F 1 Red M 1 White M F1 F2 The genotypes were deduced as: w+ X w+ P X F1 Xw Xw + × w X Y + × Xw Y : : 1 1 1 1 1 1 + Xw Xw + Xw Y + + Xw Xw + Xw Xw + Xw Y X wY F1 F2 A reciprocal cross was also performed to get more information about the gene: P White F P X wX w × Red M × + Xw Y : : 1 1 1 1 Red F White M + Xw Xw X wY F1 F1 The males who had only one recessive allele yet showed the white phenotype became known as Hemizygotes. The eye color trait’s linkage with sex determination caused a gene with this characteristic to become referred to as “X-linked.” Also, these experiments provided firm evidence for the chromosomal theory of inheritance. 1.5. SEX DETERMINATION PROVES CHROMOSOMAL INHERITANCE17 1.5.4 Primary Nondisjunction With the above reciprocal eye color cross, there were “exceptional” deviations from the usually observed ratios with frequency of about 1 in 2000: P White F P X wX w × Red M × + Xw Y : : 2000 2000 1 1 2000 2000 1 1 1 1 Red F White M White F Red M + Xw Xw X wY + X w X wX w X wX wY + Xw Y F1 F1 This was explained by attributing the exceptional individuals to a rare failure of the X chromosome to segregate properly in meiosis I called Nondisjunction. Instead of producing four normal eggs each with one X w , the female fly was deduced to have produced two eggs with no sex chromosomes and two eggs with X w X w . The exceptional female with white eyes and a Y chromosome was fertile, while the red male with no Y chromosome was sterile. The other two genotypes, trisomy X and only Y, were fatal. Using this interpretation of the data, it was deduced that sex in Drosophila was determined by the number of X chromosomes rather than presence of Y. 1.5.5 2◦ Nondisjunction The exceptional female generated by the primary nondisjunction cross above was crossed to a standard red white male, and a 2◦ nondisjunction occured with frequency 4%: F1 Xw X wY X wX w Y + Xw + Xw Xw + X w X wY + X w X wX w + Xw Y Y X wY X wY Y X wX wY YY Once again, the trisomy X and lack of X genotypes were fatal. 18 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.5.6 Barred Phenotype Crosses Reveal Meiosis I as Point of Nondisjunction Another characteristic was examined to more precisely determine the point of nondisjunction was the dominant mutant “barred” phenotype (B-). The following cross of an exceptional, red, non-barred female with a normal, red, barred male was performed: Xw + B+ X wB+ Y × X w +B Y The expectation of this cross (without nondisjunction) was that all females would be red/barred while all males would be non-barred, half red, half white. This experiment made looking for exceptional females easy since they would exhibit a non-barred phenotype if nondisjunction occured at Meiosis I. Conversely, if nondisjunction happened at Meiosis II, one would expect to see white or red non-barred females. Keep in mind that nondisjunction at Meiosis I implies gametes with the same alleles as the parent cell, whereas nondisjunction at Meiosis II implies twice as much of one allele from the parent chromosome. 1.6 Pedigree Analysis Because breeding experiments can’t be performed on humans, a solution to exploring human genetics can be found in pedigree analysis. However, this method of analysis suffers from four major drawbacks: 1. No controlled crosses 2. Imperfect family records 3. Rarely large number of offspring (hard to gauge ratios) 4. Mistaken paternity causes misinterpretation 1.6.1 Autosomal Dominant Examples of autosomal dominant traits include: 1.6. PEDIGREE ANALYSIS 19 Achondroplasia Dwarfism caused by a mutation in FGF3R that causes either constitutive activity or increased ligand affinity. This results in a faster onset (before maturity) of bone chondrocyte differentiation and consequently shorter individuals. Piebald Spotting An autosomal dominant disease is manifest with strange white skin coloration that usually occurs in the middle of the ventral part of the body. It results from a mutation in the gene c-kit, a growth factor receptor kinase. Since the receptor acts as a dimer, the mutation causes at 75% reduction of receptor activity and a consequent halt in the signaling pathway. Brachydactyly Results in malformed fingers and is caused by a mutation in the Indian hedgehog gene, a gene so named because it was originally a fly mutation that caused the fly to look very bristly like a hedgehog. Like piebald spotting, it acts through Haploinsufficiency, the condition of not being able to sustain normal phenotype with only one functional allele. Huntington’s Disease A neurological disorder that is marked by a late onset and slurred speech Characteristics of autosomal dominant traits include: 1. Every affected individual has an affected parent 2. Vertical — every generation is affected 3. Affected × Normal : 1/2 affected progeny 4. Early onset deleterious traits unlikely to be passed on 1.6.2 Autosomal Recessive Examples of autosomal recessive traits include: Albinism The complete lack of pigment in the skin Phenylketonuria Enzyme deficiency Sickle-Cell Anemia 20 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS Tay-Sachs Neurodegenerative disease Cystic Fibrosis Deficiency in lung immune system that allows bacteria to grow and inhibit gas exchange Characteristics of autosomal recessive traits include: 1. Affected individuals have unaffected parents 2. Chance union of 2 unrelated heterozygotes is small so therefore related crosses (incest) are of use in determining the nature of the trait’s inheritance 3. Carrier × Carrier : 3 Norm : 1 Affected 4. Horizontal — appears suddenly in one generation 1.6.3 X-Linked Recessive Examples of X-linked recessive traits include: Red-Green Colorblindness Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Hemophilia A Characteristics of X-linked recessive traits include: 1. More males affected 2. All sons of affected mother affected 3. All progeny of an affected male will be normal and all daughters will be carriers 4. Often skips a generation 1.7. LINKAGE 1.6.4 21 X-Linked Dominant Characteristics of X-linked dominant traits include: 1. More females than males affected 2. Affected fathers pass it on to all daughters but no sons 3. Affected mothers pass it on to half her progeny 4. Phenotype less severe in females than males 1.7 Linkage One of the assumptions of Mendelian inheritance laws is that all genes assort independently. This is true of many characteristics, but genes that are sufficiently close to one another on the same chromosome do not follow independent assortment, and are known as Linked. 1.7.1 X-Linked Mutant Cross Dihybrid crosses were performed for the following X-linked mutant traits: w+ w y+ y Red White Brown Yellow Here are the crosses, with only the male F2 progeny displayed: + + + × Xw yY + +y × X wy Y P X wy X wy F1 X wy X w + + : : + 1 X wy X w y + 1 X wy Y + 4484 X wy Y + 4413 X w y Y 76 X wy Y + + 53 X w y Y F1 F2 Note the departure from expectation in the F2 generation. The F2 sons that appeared less frequently were produced by an egg with a pair of X chromosomes that had participated in a crossing-over event between the w 22 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS and y gene loci. These progeny are referred to as Recombinant, since their genotypes are not among the parental genotypes. The proportion of recombinant progeny in these crosses is, empirically: 76 + 53 = 0.01429 4484 + 4413 + 76 + 53 This number, a measure of recombination frequency, is usually viewed as a percent (1.429%) which is equivalent to centiMorgans (1.429cM) which is equivalent to map units (1.429m.u.). To a certain degree, the physical distance between genes can be approximated as proportional to recombination frequency. However, if an approximation is used, it must be specific to the organism and chromosome on which the genes are linked. 1.7.2 Autosomal Mutant Cross Dihybrid crosses were performed for the following autosomal mutant traits: b+ b c+ c Brown Black Straight Curved Here are the crosses. Note that the F1 cross is actually a test cross, as denoted by F1 T: P F1 T bc+ /bc+ F × b+ c/b+ c M : bc+ /b+ c F × : bc/bc M bc+ /b+ c 2934 bc+ /bc 2768 b+ c/bc 871 bc/bc 846 b+ c+ /bc F1 F2 These results indicate that the b and c gene loci are separated by approximately 23.14cM. 1.7. LINKAGE 1.7.3 23 χ2 Test of Linkage With the above data, there is not much doubt that the genes are linked. However, with genes that are observed to be separated by > 40cM, one begins to question whether the genes are linked or unlinked. To differentiate between these two possibilities, the statistical method of applying a χ2 test statistic to a multinomial model is used. First, define the hypotheses: H0 : Genes are unlinked HA : Genes are linked Let O1 , O2 , ..., On be the observed Pn frequencies of progeny. Then the total number of observations is T = i=1 Oi . Considering that 50% parental gametes and 50% recombinant gametes are expected under H0 , assign expected proportions p1 , p2 , ..., pn to each observed category of progeny. For example, consider the simple dihybrid cross above: P bc+ /bc+ F × b+ c/b+ c M : F1 T bc+ /b+ c F × : bc/bc M bc+ /b+ c 0.25 bc+ /bc 0.25 b+ c/bc 0.25 bc/bc 0.25 b+ c+ /bc F1 F2 In this case, pi = 1/4 |4i=1 . Now calculate expected counts E1 , E2 , ..., En , where Ei = T pi . Finally, we have enough information to calculate the χ2 test statistic. Pick your favorite of these two equivalent test statistics: P Pearson’s X 2 = ni=1 (Oi − Ei )2 /Ei P Likelihood Ratio X 2 = 2 ni=1 Oi ln(Oi /Ei ) Since X 2 ∼ χ2n−1 , a p-value can be calculated by finding the area under χ2n−1 to the right of X 2 . The p-value can be interpreted as the probability of observing deviations from the expected values under H0 as large or larger than what was observed. Therefore, a high p-value (p > 0.1) is strong evidence for linkage, and a low p-value (p < 0.01) is strong evidence that the genes are unlinked. In our example above, we have: 24 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS i 1 2 3 4 Oi 2934 2768 871 846 pi 1/4 1/4 1/4 1/4 Ei Xi2 1854.75 2691.16 1854.75 2216.48 1854.75 -1317.71 1854.75 -1328.19 P4 2 2 Thus, X 2 = i=1 Xi = 2262.73. The area under χ3 to the right of 2262.71 is approximately 0, so this is strong evidence that gene loci b and c are linked. 1.7.4 Summary of Linkage 1. Physical linkage is somewhat related to genetic linkage, but varies with organism and chromosome 2. Genetic recombination between linked loci results from the physical event of crossing-over 3. 0 ≤ Recombination Frequency ≤ 0.5 since no recombination is expected for adjacent genes and at maximum 1/2 of progeny will be of recombinant, rather than parental, genotypes 1.8 1.8.1 Genetic Mapping Mapping 5 Genes With 2-Point Crosses Consider the following observed gene separations, in cM: m y w v r m y w - 34.3 32.8 1.1 - v 4 33 32.1 - r 17.8 42.9 42.1 24.1 - Considering just the three loci m, w, and y, it is easy to deduce the following topology: 1.8. GENETIC MAPPING 1.1 y | 25 32.8 w m } {z 34.3 Note that the two smaller map distances do not sum to the larger map distance. This is expected for 2-point crosses. By considering v and r, we can deduce the complete topology of these genes: y 1.1 w | 1.8.2 m 4 v 32.8 r } 17.8 {z 42.9 Mapping 3 Genes With 3-Point Crosses Consider the following trihybrid F1 crosses, also known as 3-point crosses: P Homo- vg b pr × Homo- vg + b+ pr+ : F1 T Heterozygotes × : Homo- vg b pr All Heterozygotes 1779 vg b pr 1654 vg + b+ pr+ 252 vg + b pr 241 vg b+ pr+ 9 vg + b+ pr 13 vg b pr+ 118 vg b+ pr 131 vg + b pr+ To construct a genetic linkage map, the key point to realize is that the probability of two independent recombination events happening is much less likely than the probability of only one. This implies that the gene which resides in between the other two will most likely be the one that crosses-over by itself the least number of times. In this case, the pr recombinants are observed the least, so pr must reside between vg and b. This suggests the map: vg pr b F1 F2 26 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS Since pr recombinants reflect progeny with chromosomes that have crossedover twice between b and vg, these numbers must be counted twice to determine the map distance between vg and b. Also, these numbers must be counted once along with the other vg and b recombinants to determine, respectively, the distances |vg − pr| and |b − pr|. Thus, the map distances in this example are: |vg − pr| = 9 + 13 + 252 + 241 = 0.12271 4197 |b − pr| = 9 + 13 + 118 + 131 = 0.06457 4197 |b − vg| = 0.06457 + 0.12271 = 0.18728 These numbers imply the following gene map (in units of cM): vg 12.27 1.8.3 pr 6.46 b Interference Is it necessarily true that P (Two Single Crossover Events) = P (Single Crossover Event)2 ? = P (Double Crossover Event) No! In fact, the phenomenon of single crossover events somehow inhibiting the occurence of double crossover events is referred to as Interference and is derived from the Coefficient of coincidence, which is defined as: Kc = nObserved Doubles /nExpected Doubles The interference is defined as I ≡ 1 − Kc . I values close to zero indicate that single crossover events inhibit almost all double crossover events. I values close to 1 indicate that no inhibition is present. For example, consider the example above. The observed proportion of double crossovers is 22/4197, while the observed proportion of single crossovers are 0.123 and 0.064. Therefore, the expected proportion of doubles is (0.123)(0.064) = 0.007872 1.9. TETRAD ANALYSIS 27 Therefore, Kc = 0.007872 = 0.67:I = 0.33 22/4197 1.9 Tetrad Analysis 1.9.1 Fungi As A Model In many organisms the products of individual meiosis events can’t be examined, so genetic analysis relies on interpretation of large samples of data and the law of large numbers. However, with the two yeasts Saccraromyces cerevisiae (baker’s yeast) and Neurospora (bread mold), it is possible to pick out spores, put them in a line on selective media, and count how many survive in each Tetrad to deduce the specific products of individual meioses. Consequently, these yeasts are great genetic models. 1.9.2 Meiosis in S. cerevisiae There are two mating types, called a and α, in S. cerevisiae. An organism can exist as a haploid (10 chromosomes) form of one mating type or a diploid (2 copies each of 10 homologous chromosomes) form with a fusion of the two mating types. The product of meiosis in S. cerevisiae is an ascus of four haploid spores, half a and half α. The life cycle of the organism is diagrammed below. Ascus a, a, α, α ↑ Meiosis & ↑ Diploid a/α . Haploid a -. 1.9.3 & . Haploid α -. Genetics of S. cerevisiae Upper case gene names denote dominant alleles, while lower case gene names denote recessive mutant alleles. To illustrate the possible outcomes of a yeast cell division, consider a diploid organism that resulted from the union of an a with genotype his4 TRP1 28 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS and an α with genotype HIS4 trp1. Assuming these genes are unlinked and that chromosome replication proceeds normally, consider the following meioses: Parental Ditype (PD) During meiosis I, parental chromosomes stay together, forming two yeasts with genotype his4 TRP1 and two yeasts with genotype HIS4 trp1 Non-Parental Ditype (NPD) During meiosis I, parental chromosomes separate, forming two yeasts with genotype HIS4 TRP1 and two yeasts with genotype his4 trp1 Tetratype (T) During metaphase I, a crossing-over event causes a rearrangement between two replicated chromosomes that results in the creation of a two heterozygous chromosomes. Meiosis I separates these two heterozygous chromosomes, and meiosis II separates the two different alleles into separate spores. This results in the spore products his4 trp1, HIS4 TRP1, his4 TRP1, HIS4 trp1. When genes are unlinked, the number of Parental Ditypes should be approximately equal to the number of Non-Parental Ditypes. However, when genes are linked, the PD NPD. This is because the genes do not assort independently of one another and, assuming no crossing-over, are forced to stay together throughout the life of the chromosome. 1.9.4 Recombination Frequency Consider the cross of an a arg3 ura2 haploid with an α ARG3 URA2. A diploid arg3 ura2/ARG3 URA2 results from the cross and produces the following haploid progeny: PD NPD T 127 3 70 In all cases, we will take the recombination frequency to be, intuitively: F = nRecombinant Tetrads /nTotal Tetrads To determine the recombination frequency assuming at most 1 crossover, the estimate is given by: F1 = nNPD + nT /2 nTotal 1.9. TETRAD ANALYSIS 29 This makes sense because all NPD’s will result from crossing-over and 1/2 of the spores produced in a Tetratype result from a crossing-over event. However, double crossovers happen. So, under the assumption that all double crossovers happen with equal probability and that there are no more than two crossing-over events, a better estimate of recombination frequency is given by: nT /2 + 3nNPD F2 = nTotal To understand this estimate, we must examine the four possibilities for double crossover events. 1. An event involving two strands will produce a PD 2. The two possible events involving three strands will produce a T 3. An event involving all four strands of the two chromosomes will produce an NPD Remember that each single crossover event yields a T, and that no crossing over yields a PD. Using this information, and assuming these four events are equally likely, we can use the fact that NPD’s only show up in double crossovers to infer that: nSingle Crossover = nT − n3 Strand Double Crossovers = nT − 2nNPD nDouble Crossover = 4nNPD Therefore, we arrive at our assertion that: nT /2 + 3nNPD 1/2(nT − 2nNPD ) + 4nNPD = nTotal nTotal Generally, the recombination frequency considering an arbitrary number of crossover events c should be calculated as c X Fc = 1/nTotal Tetrads (2i/4)ni , F2 = i=1 where ni is the number of tetrads that have done i crossover events, and 2i is the number of chromosomes involved in the i crossover events. Thus, 2i/4 = i/2 is the number of crossover events per cell. For example, when c = 2, we have: F2 = 2(1)/4n1 + 2(2)/4n2 = n1 /2 + n2 30 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.9.5 Neurospora crassa The advantage to using this genetic model is that it is possible to map the centromere relative to other genes on the chromosome because of the organism’s ordered tetrads. The two haploid mating types of Neurospora crassa are a and A, and their fusion results in a diploid A/a being capable of meiosis. First, an ascus forms to protect the fungus’ spores. Then, meiosis I causes homologous chromosome separation and cell division into two haploid cells with replicated chromosomes. Then, meiosis II causes separation of sister chromatids and formation of four haploid cells. One last mitotic cell division results in the production of 8 haploid spores, an Octad, which are spatially oriented in the ascus. Therefore, in each ascus the octad is comprised of four pairs of adjacent, identical spores that may be treated as a tetrad. The orientation of these spore pairs lets you deduce the events that happened in the meioses. To map the centromere for genes in these cells, the map distance is defined as: nMeiosis II Segregates /2 This makes sense, because half of the observed meiosis II segregates will be affected by a single crossing-over event. Additionally, during a crossing over event, all chromatin from the location of the event to the end of the chromosome is transferred to the homologous chromosome. Therefore, only recombination events that occur between the gene of interest and the centromere will result in observing the recombinant phenotype. 1.10 Recombination Mechanisms 1.10.1 Physical Exchange In 1931, Creighton and McClintock performed experiments on recombination in maize to confirm the physical basis of genetic exchange. They located a region on chromosome 9 where they could track the inheritance of two linked genes, each proximal to a readily identifiable cytogenetic marker. They created two individuals: 1. Double dominant with no cytogenetic markers 1.10. RECOMBINATION MECHANISMS 31 2. Double recessive with a marker proximal to each allele When the recombinant progeny’s karyotype was observed, the markers appeared on different chromosomes. This indicates that crossing-over is a manifestation of a physical mechanism of trading chromatin between homologous chromosomes. 1.10.2 Breaking and Rejoining To establish that breaking and rejoining was a universal phenomenon unrelated to proximal genes, the following experiment was performed. Viral DNA was constructed for three linked genes: 1. Triple dominant grown on heavy isotope media 2. Triple recessive grown on light isotope media The two types of viral DNA were mixed and allowed to infect a some host bacteria. To rule out the possibility that the DNA would be replicated, an inhibitor was added. After a certain amount of time, the virus repackaged its DNA into new virions, which were separated out on a column by weight. Unsurprisingly, the continuum of heterogeneity of the result confirmed the hypothesis that crossing-over could occur anywhere. 1.10.3 Gene Conversion Gene conversion is the unidirectional transfer of genetic information, which can sometimes be provoked by Heteroduplex. When examining hybrid crosses in S. cerevisiae, a 2:2 ratio of progeny is expected without crossing-over. When examining crosses of Neurospora crassa, a 4:4 ratio of progeny is expected. However, exceptional ratios of 6:2, 5:3, and 3:1:1:3 are observed rarely. To explain these odd results, consider the results of meiosis if two heterogenous strands of DNA exist or are somehow produced as a result of crossing-over. In this case, one strand could have the mutant allele, while the other strand carried the wild-type allele. Then, the final mitosis event would duplicate each strand of the heterogenous DNA and produce two spores with different genotypes. 32 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS If each of the two heteroduplex DNA molecules are repaired with different strands before mitosis, the 5:3 case results. If both heteroduplex DNA molecules are repaired with the same strand before mitosis, the 6:2 case results. If no repair occurs, the 3:1:1:3 case is observed. This immediately suggests the DNA repair mechanisms to respond to genome damage, first explained in MCB 110. From the trihybrid haploid cross abc × ABC, an ABC/abc diploid yeast results. When this yeast produces spores, there are four observed gene conversion types: 1. ABC, ABC, aBc, abc 2. ABC, ABc, aBC, abc 3. ABC, AbC, abc, abc 4. ABC, Abc, abC, abc Note that the A:a and C:c ratios are both 2:2, while the B:b ratio is 3:1 or 1:3. In the boxed types, it is clear that both recombination and gene conversion has occured. The other options only provide evidence of gene conversion. 1.10.4 Models of Recombination Any physical model of the recombination process needs to consider: 1. Physical breaking and rejoining 2. Equal replication products 3. Can occur anywhere 4. No new mutations 5. Gene conversion can explain rare tetrads Meselson revised the 1964 standard Holliday model and postulated that 1 single strand nick in DNA initiates the recombination event. The model consists of the following steps: 1. Nicking 1.11. PATHWAY DISSECTIONS 33 2. Whisker displacement 3. First strand invasion 4. Second strand invasion 5. Repair and ligation 6. Branch migration 7. The Holliday intermediate 8. Alternative resolutions 1.11 Pathway Dissections As an example, consider the following biochemical pathway: 1 2 3 4 5 6 Phe → Tyr → p-hydroxy- → 2,5-dihydroxy- → HA → MA → CO2 + H2 O 4 Tyr →→ Melanin Defects in this pathway can cause disease: 1 Phenylketonuria: Phe is converted to a toxic chemical 2 Tyrosinosus: Tyr levels are elevated, causing congenital abnormalities 3 Tyrosinemia: death at 6 months due to liver damage 4 Albinism In the Mendelian model of inheritance, one gene is responsible for the inheritance of one trait. In 1902, Garrod studied cases of alkaptonuria, in which homegentissic acid accumulates in the blood of affected individuals. He found that this toxic chemical doesn’t accumulate in the blood of unaffected individuals, even if artificially introduced. 34 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.11.1 One Gene-One Protein In the 1940s, Beadle and Tatum explored this hypothesis through mutants of Neurospora crassa, which they found to be a great model organism because: 1. Life cycle well known 2. Easy to induce mutations 3. Very little required to grow: biotin, glucose, and salt Their experiment went as follows. After growing some haploid spores, they irradiated them with X-rays to induce mutations. These mutant haploid individuals were mated to the opposite mating type and then each spore produced was grown on complete media. The screen for mutants began at this stage. Each product spore was tested by trying to culture it on minimal media. Most will grow since most won’t have any mutations. However, the ones with induced mutations will not be able to grow. Sequential tests of mutants were used to determine the protein for which it is deficient. The mutants were tested first on plates of vitamins, plates of amino acids, etc. Then, say the mutants were only able to grow on plates of amino acids. The specific amino acid required was determined by plating the mutants on 20 plates each containing one amino acid. These experiments were used to prove the “one gene-one protein” hypothesis, which was later modified to “one gene-one polypeptide” and sometimes “one gene-one RNA.” 1.11.2 Arg Mutants For example, consider the mutants argE, argF, argG, argH, four genes (not necessarily proteins) found to be required for Arg synthesis. The following pathway is known: →ornithine→citrulline→arginosuccinate→Arg The result of growing mutants on minimal media plus a relevant nutrient is summarized below: 1.12. COMPLEMENTATION TEST 35 Nutrient wt argE nothing + ornithine + + citrulline + + arginosuccinate + + Arg + + argF + + + argG argH + + + This implies the pathway below: argE argF argG argH → ornithine → citrulline → arginosuccinate → Arg 1.12 Complementation Test A Complementation test reveals if two recessive mutations are at the same locus or two different loci. In other words, the complementation test shows if two mutations are two genes or two alleles of the same gene. To carry out the test, simply create a carrier of the two recessive mutations, called a “transheterozygote,” by crossing two single carriers. Progeny with wild-type phenotype imply that the mutations “complement” one another and therefore are different genes. Progeny with the mutant phenotype imply that the mutations “fail to complement” one another and therefore are two alleles of the same gene. A Complementation group is a group of mutations that identify the same gene and fail to complement one another. For example of the results of a complementation test, let us consider Drosophila mutations. Transheterozygotes were constructed and observed for pairs of each of nine mutations. white garnet ruby vermilion cherry coral apricot buff carnation white + + + + garnet + + + + + + + ruby vermilion + + + + + + + + + + + cherry coral apricot + + + buff carnation + - 36 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS Therefore, we can deduce that garnet is a single gene, ruby is a single gene, carnation is a single gene, and white, cherry, coral, apricot, and buff are five alleles of a single gene. 1.13 Zebrafish 1.13.1 Modeling Development Zebrafish is an excellent model organism for vertebrate development because it satisfies each of the following criteria: 1. Easy cultivation (doesn’t easily lose mutants) 2. Short generation time 3. Easy to house 4. Accumulated knowledge present 5. Specifics In this case, “specifics” refers to the fact that it is a vertebrate and it is transparent, so it is easy to observe every cell. In addition, the yolk is in the middle of the developing organism, which means the cells don’t have to be clouded by microyolks and are clearly visible. 1.13.2 Development Zebrafish develop mature bodies very quickly: Time (hours) Stage 3 Blastula .. . 24 All organs and systems in place 72 Functional maturity However, they reach sexual maturity only after 8-10 weeks. 1.13. ZEBRAFISH 1.13.3 37 Alternate Complementation Test There are many zebrafish mutations that are recessive lethal, so an altered version of the complementation test is used. When heterozygotes are crossed, 1/4 of the progeny are expected to show the lethal phenotype. 1.13.4 Haploid Embryos Zebrafish embryos are normally diploid when fertilized, but special haploid embryos can be contructed to more closely examine the organism’s genetics. The genetic material of sperm is destroyed by irradiation, but the sperm retains the ability to stimulate an ovum to begin development into a zygote. One such haploid embryo only has genetic material from the mother. Analysis of F2 progeny is usually normal but mutations show up in the F3 generation. 1.13.5 Expression Screen To differentiate genes that are expressed in every cell from genes expressed only at certain times or in certain cells, the technique of in situ hybridization is used. A riboprobe complementary to a certain mRNA of interest is contructed and introduced into target cells. The probe will bind a homologous mRNA sequence, and detection of the probe implies the location of gene expression. Obesity is a characteristic where screening is effective. Obesity is a genetic trait that causes zebrafish to continue eating whatever is present, whether or not it is of optimal nutritive value. 1.13.6 Half Tetrads In Zebrafish, after meiosis I, ova are stalled in meiosis II until union with a sperm. If an irradiated sperm fertilizes this egg, a pair of Gynogenetic diploid individuals (all DNA from mother) will result. Homologous chromosomes separate, but the second meiotic division is blocked, forcing sister chromatids to remain in the same cell and form 2 diploid progeny with only maternal chromosomes. Crossing-over occurs normally in these individuals. Most progeny will be of parental ditype. The frequencies are assigned variables as follows: 38 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS PM MM × mm : M MM × mm : p MM q mm r Mm s Mm F1NoXO (PD) F1XO (T) Therefore, since half tetrads are countable in Zebrafish, 2q represents the number of PD progeny. Let N be the total number of cells that result. Then, N −2q represents the number of T progeny, which are all recombinant. Therefore, we can define recombination frequency as: RF = N − 2q = 1 − 2q/N N However, it is somehow more accurate to introduce a factor of 1/2 since only one of the chromosomes is involved in the crossing-over event. Therefore, define the recombination frequency as: RF = 1/2 − q/N This kind of makes sense because it limits the range of RF to the usual range: 0 ≤ RF ≤ 0.5. But note that this number isn’t really a percent; in fact, it is in units of chromatids per cell. This RF value allows you to map the centromere distance. Genes very close to the centromere will have very nearly 100% PD half tetrads. 1.14 Chromosomal Rearrangements 1.14.1 Origins of Mutations • Replication errors (rare) • Environment: – Chemicals – Transposable elements – Radiation (point mutation or ds break) 1.15. DELETIONS 1.14.2 39 Types • Point, or one base, mutation • Rearrangements • Transposable elements 1.15 Deletions 1.15.1 Overview Deficiencies, also known as deletions, happen when chromosomal chunks are removed. These can be • Interstitial (middle of chromosome) • Terminal (end of chromosome) and either • Intragenic (1 gene) • Multigenic (> 1 gene) Deletion homozygotes (Df-/Df-) are often nonviable in multigenic deletions. However, deletion carriers could have normal phenotype and are of some use to geneticists. Deletion carriers may be nonviable if the gene • Dosage is important • Other allele is recessive (Pseudodominance). For example, retinal blastomas occur in development if a pRB gene is deleted. Let denote a centromere. For example, consider the two chromosomes: 1. ABCDEFG 2. ABFG 40 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS Since there is no pairing partner for CDE in the deletion mutant chromosome, there will be no base pairing in the deletion region, and consequently 1. A Deletion loop structure will form 2. No recombination occurs in the deleted region 3. Less recombination will occur between B and F 1.15.2 Allele Screens Mutants are crossed with deletion mutants to more easily reveal the presence of recessive point mutations in novel progeny. One way to map deficiencies is to look for missing chromosomal bands. The smallest overlapping region with a common genotype implies the location of the gene on the chromosome. Question 1 What is the resolution of this technique? Question 2 Does genomics make allele screens obsolete? In many ways, the high resolution of genomics does make allele screens obsolete. However, it is nice to do a reality cross-check of genomics with allele screen data. 1.15.3 Deletion Characteristics 1. Deletion loops 2. Recessive lethality 3. Lack of reversion 4. Reduced RF in animals not plants* 5. Pseudodominance *The pollen in non-polyploid plants is not viable with deletions (however, the embryo sacs, the plant female gametophytes, are). This suggests natural selection has evolved this as a method of avoid errors and perpetuating fit species. 1.16. DUPLICATIONS 1.16 41 Duplications There are two types of duplications: tandem or non-tandem. Tandem duplications occur next to one another in sequence. Non-tandem duplications appear in some other part of the genome. For example, a tandem mutation might cause the sequence ABCDEFG to change to ABCBCDEFG or ABCCBDEFG. As another example, consider the bar mutation in Drosophila chromosome region 16A. As the result of a sloppy crossing-over event, the bar mutation can be placed onto one chromosome twice. If this chromosome is replicated and preserved, further crossing over can result in an individual who has one chromosome with three alleles and another chromosome with one allele, which results in the “double bar” phenotype (frequency 1/1600). Once again, loops may form as a result of duplications that disrupt continuous base pairing. Duplications can be detrimental if the gene’s dosage is important, or if, for a non-tandem duplication, the gene is relocated to a position under the control of another promoter. 1.17 Inversions The thing to remember with inversions is that crossing over occurs only when the homologous chromosomes have aligned in such a way as to maximize base pairing. 1.17.1 Pericentric Inversion Pericentric inversions occur when the centromere is involved in the loop structure that forms and so any crossing-over events that occur will generate chromatids with centromeres attached. Initially, the chromosomes might have been inverted to the following configuration: ABCDEFG ADCBEFG 42 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS Recombination at the point between B and C (see figure) will result in the following four strands of DNA: ABCDEFG ABCDA ADCBEFGH HGFEBCDEFGH 1.17.2 Viable Not Viable Viable Not Viable Paracentric Inversion Paracentric inversions occur when the centromere is not involved in the loop structure that forms, and so an Acentric chromosome fragment is formed along with a Dicentric chromosome fragment (see figure). There are two bad things about paracentric inversion: 1. Large portion of DNA is lost in the acentric chromosome fragment 2. Dicentric chromosome fragments are pulled apart at a random location by the spindle during anaphase, resulting in a possible loss of genes 1.17.3 Diagnostics for Inversions 1. Inversion loops 2. Reduced RF 3. Reduced fertility 4. Inverted chromosomal landmark / cytology 1.17.4 Utility of Inversions Since it is impossible to pure breed homozygous lethal mutants, the only way to maintain the mutation is a lot of effort selecting offspring of carrier heterozygous crosses. Use a Balancer chromosome to overcome this shortfall. With multiple inversions, these specially engineered chromosomes have special features: 1. No crossing over 2. Dominant marker mutation 1.18. TRANSLOCATIONS 43 3. Recessive lethal mutation The benefit to using a balancer chromosome is that heterozygotes for the novel mutant can be easily and continuously bred, since the homozygous balancer progeny will die as a result of the balancer’s recessive lethal mutation. The other heterozygote progeny will be the only survivors. These chromosomes can be used in genetic screens to look for new mutants. 1.18 Translocations Translocation events occur when part of one chromosome becomes a part of another, non-homologous chromosome. They come in two flavors: reciprocal and non-reciprocal. Reciprocal translocations involve a two-way exchange of genetic material, whereas non-reciprocal translocations are a one-way donation. Of primary interest are reciprocal translocations. 1.18.1 Overview Translocation of normal chromosomes (N1, N2) result in the production of two translocated chromosomes (T1, T2). Note that the chromosome number comes from the origin of its centromere. N1 N2 T1 T2 ABCDEF GHIJKL ABCJKL GHIDEF In prophase of Meiosis I, chromosomes will align to maximize base pairing, so Cross structures will form when translocated chromosomes are present. There are three options among offspring: Alternate N1/N2 and T1/T2, frequency 50% Adjacent I N1/T2 and N2/T1, frequency 50% Adjacent II N1/T1 and N2/T2, very rare Translocations are potentially harmful because they can split apart genes or render a gene under the influence of a novel promoter. 44 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.18.2 Diagnostics of Translocations 1. Apparent linkage of genes usually on different chromosomes 2. Semi-sterility 3. Chromosome changes in size 1.18.3 Robertsonian Translocation This type of translocation in humans leads to Down’s Syndrome, which usually results from trisomy 21. In this translocation, two of the Acrocentric chromosomes, 14 and 21, swap material, generating a very small chromosome (diacrocentric) and a chromosome much larger than either 14 or 21 individually. This creates effectively a larger dose of 21 and leads to the Down’s Syndrome phenotype. 1.19 Ploidy 1.19.1 Terms First, let’s establish some terminology. Ploidy Number of chromosome sets Euploid More than one set of chromosomes Monoploid One set of chromosomes Diploid Two sets of chromosomes Polyploid More than two sets of chromosomes Basic Chromosome Number Chromosomes per set (equivalent to “haploid number”) Allopolyploid Containing sets of chromosomes from more than one organism Autopolyploid Containing multiple sets of chromosomes from one organism 1.19. PLOIDY 1.19.2 45 Monoploidy Bees and wasps are examples of organisms that are naturally monoploid. Geneticists can generate monoploids in a genetically useful manner for genetic screens. For example, consider the following plant monoploid genetic screen: 1. Take pollen from a 2n plant and grow them up in an agar dish with hormones. 1n sterile plants result. 2. Take somatic tissue from the plant, then mutagenize it and grow it out on a selective agar dish. This creates a resistant 1n strain of plant. 3. Add colchine, a chemical that blocks spindle formation during mitosis and causes formation of diploid progeny like in zebrafish half-tetrads. 1.19.3 Polyploidy Not many animals are naturally polyploid, but some examples are leeches, flatworms, goldfish, and brine shrimp, which have an unusual sexual cycle and can sustain polyploidy. Triploid oysters are sterile, so they have no seasonal sexual physiological changes. Genetically engineering sustainable triploid oysters has been suggested as a potential method to enjoy the good taste of oysters (absent when reproducing) all year long. A third of all known flowering plants are naturally polyploid, a characteristic that has been unconsciously selected for by humans. For example, the huge strawberries you can buy at Costco are a result of the big nuclei, big cells, and big growth that is induced by octaploidy. Though prevalent, it still causes some organisms, such as bananas, to be sexually sterile. Triploidy can be generated by fusing the gametes of a 4n and a 2n individual. The gametes will be 2n and 1n and so the progeny will be 3n. However, these triploid individuals need to find triploid mates to reproduce. Since this happens so infrequently, triploidy is considered to be effective sterility. 1.19.4 Autotetraploidy Autotetraploidy may be induced in development when a failed mitotic event causes the development of a tetraploid cell, tissue, or organ. If one of these 46 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS shoots produces reproductive structures, diploid gametes will be produced. This is somewhat advantageous for the plant, since it confers resistance from recessive lethal mutations. By the same token, it increases susceptibility to dominant lethal mutations, but since these are much less prevalent, an overall advantage is retained. 1.19.5 Allotetraploidy Also called amphidiploids, allotetraploids are the products of the union of two gametes of non-identical organisms. After union of two haploid gametes, chromosome doubling brings the cell’s total ploidy to 4. Question 3 How and why are chromosomes doubled? Question 4 What are the extremes of allotetraploids that can be constructed? What breeding experiments with radically different organisms have been done? What has been assumed? Why doesn’t this usually work? 1.19.6 Aneuploidy Aneuploidy results when a subset of genetic material is over- or underrepresented in the genome. Hypoaneuploidy results from one less chromosome than usual, and hyperaneuploidy results from one more. This primarily occurs as a result of nondisjunction at meiosis 2. There are four viable trisomies in humans: 21 Down’s syndrome: mental retardation 13 18 X Superfemale: some mental retardation and sterility Another aneuploidy is Kleinfelter’s syndrome, which is represented most commonly by the genotype XXY, but can occur in many other combinations of sex chromosomes. The only viable human monosomy is for X, which results in sterility and is called Turner’s syndrome. 1.20. ORGANELLE GENETICS 1.20 47 Organelle Genetics There are two primary organelles with interesting genetic properties: mitochondria and chloroplasts, both of which have their own associated DNA, but need protein products from the nuclear genome to function properly. Organelle genomes can be either Heteroplasmic, meaning varied, within a cell, or Homoplasmic, meaning nearly uniform. 1.20.1 Mitochondrial DNA Characteristics of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) include: 1. Variable size between organisms 2. Mostly circular In humans, there are 37 mitochondrial genes arranged into a very compact DNA strand. Yeast, an organism with a smaller nuclear genome, has four times as much mtDNA as humans. This implies that there is not necessarily any correlation between nuclear genome and mitochondrial genome size. 1.20.2 Chloroplast DNA Characteristics of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) include: 1. Mostly homogenous between organisms 2. Generally more genes than mtDNA 3. Mostly circular 1.20.3 Bacterial Similarities The endosymbiotic theory of organelle origin postulates that subcellular structures were derived from smaller extracellular organisms at some point in the evolutionary past. Evidence of this includes these marked areas of similarities between organelle DNA and bacterial DNA: 1. Independent DNA replication 48 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 2. Sensitive to bacterial translation inhibitors 3. DNA not organized into nucleosomes 1.20.4 Four O’ Clocks A small flowering plant, the four o’ clock proved to be one of the earliest example of uniparental inheritance. Consider the following two crosses: P Green F P Variegated F × Variegated M : × Green M : All Green All Variegated F1 F1 This implies maternal uniparental inheritance. Remember that a difference in offspring phenotype dependent on which parent had the mutant phenotype was also observed in X-linked Drosophila traits, and investigated using reciprocal crosses. However, since there is no difference in phenotype between gender among the offspring in the four o’ clocks, this is clearly a case of uniparental inheritance. 1.20.5 Xenopus Consider the following crosses between the two Xenopus species laevis and borealis, which are able to interbreed and have discernably different mitochondrial genomes: P laevis F P borealis F 1.20.6 × borealis M × laevis M : : All laevis mtDNA All borealis mtDNA F1 F1 Cultivating cpDNA Organelle DNA is usually heterogenous within a cell, but by random chance or selection can be made homogenous within a subsection of an organism. For example, consider a variegated plant with speckled white and green patches. If a shoot grows out from a green area, then the cultivation of a new plant from those cells will result in an entirely green plant. The same is true for an area that lacks the green pigment, although the plant will be unable to reach maturity. 1.20. ORGANELLE GENETICS 1.20.7 49 LHON A rare human disease that diminishes electron transport in mitochondria, LHON has disastrous effects for the optic nerve and can cause blindness. The condition only occurs if the populations of mitochondria in the cells of the optic nerve are nearly homogenous for the mutation. Children of an affected parent are variably affected since random chance during development could have caused the optic nerve cells to develop with the mutation and the germ cells to develop without the mutation. One of the reasons LHON develops is the relatively high mutation rate of DNA in the mitochondria, possibly due to the proximity of the DNA to oxidative stress. 1.20.8 Chlamydamonas In this useful model algae, there exists only 1 chloroplast per haploid cell. Consider the following cross, where m represents the mating type (analogous to sex) and y and s are two genes of interest: P m + y + sR × m − y − sS : 2 y + sR 2 y − sR F1 This evidence implies that the s gene is inherited uniparentally and the m strain’s chloroplast DNA is selectively degraded during the gamete union, leaving only the m+ strain’s genotype of sR . The evidence also implies that y is located on a nuclear chromosome. In fact, this mitochondrial DNA of this organism’s m+ strain is selectively degraded at gamete union, leaving only the genotypes of the m− strain. − 1.20.9 Yeast In yeast, if a chloramphenicol resistant haploid individual is mated with a chloramphenicol sensitive haploid individual, a resistant individual develops. Many new yeast can bud from this one offspring when grown on complete media. If these are replica plated onto a chloramphenicol plate, half of the colonies will lives and half will die. The colonies that survive will be homoplasmic chloramphenicol resistant. 50 CHAPTER 1. CLASSICAL AND MOLECULAR GENETICS 1.20.10 Diagnostics 1. Consistent with maternal inheritance 2. Tissues should have defective mitochondrial function (assay with cytoplasmic hybrids) 3. Variability among progeny (even twins) 4. Mitotic segregation (in addition to meiotic) Chapter 2 Genetics in Society 2.1 2.1.1 The Human Genome Size The complete human genome is a huge tome approximately 600 times the length of the American Declaration of Independence. It can be fit into a stack of textbooks, each of them the size of Genetics by Hartwell et al., approximately 22 feet high. Should we be proud of the extent of our genome’s expansiveness? Well, maybe not, as will be explained. It is worthy to note that there are organisms with even larger genomes than humans: Amphibia Tulip 10 times larger Amoeba 200 times larger Furthermore, some very closely related plants have genomes of drastically different sizes. This suggests that genome size is not uniformly informative about an organism’s complexity. In a technique used to gauge genome complexity, the following steps are performed: 1. Physically shear DNA 51 52 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 2. Denature DNA 3. Renature DNA slowly 4. Measure the proportion of ssDNA as a function of time It turns out that the curve generated by these measurements is a sigmoidal binding curve whose mean value depends on the size and whose shape depends on the complexity of the genome. For example, the yeast genome is bigger than the E. coli genome, which, in turn, is bigger than a viral genome. These organisms all exhibit standard sigmoidal binding curves. However, using the same assay on the human genome reveals that it is much larger, and has three plateaus, which correspond to areas of the genome with high, medium, and low complexity. Note that complexity here is understood to mean lacking repeated sequences. 2.1.2 Repetition The human genome contains approximately 45 percent repetitive sequences. These can come in the form of Long Interspersed Elements (LINES) and Short Interspersed Elements (SINES). The main human LINE is L1, which is 6.4kb and appears about 20,000 times. The main human SINE is Alu, which is 0.28kb and appears about 300,000 times. Why do these repetitive sequences proliferate in our genome? Simple population genetics says that since we depend on sex to reproduce, the fitness of a transposon is twice that of its host. 2.1.3 Contructing Genome Maps The idea about mapping a genome is essentially the same as mapping the a city, county, or country. The goal of the map is to put the components of the system in spatial relation to one another. There are three kinds of genomic maps: 1. Chromosomal 2. Linkage 2.1. THE HUMAN GENOME 53 3. Physical For humans, these three kinds of maps have been contructed and integrated. 2.1.4 Chromosomal Maps The simplest type of map, chromosomal maps characterize the metaphase spread banding patterns that arise with staining. Proper training will let you identify chromosomes based on only banding pattern. Another method of chromosomal mapping is by using Spectral Karyotyping (SKY), which facilitates rapid chromosomal identification by differential coloring. The problem with chromosomal maps is that they only break the genome up into 23 chunks, which isn’t a very deep classification. 2.1.5 Linkage Maps Contructing a linkage map is a bit more complex and requires deduction based on supposed genetic recombination events. To construct a linkage map, unique (like Jesse Ventura) genetic markers must be available in order to allow deduction of genetic location. Think of genetic markers as analogous to the calculus. It makes no sense when you initially study it, but you eventually will have a great grasp of it with time. Mapping involves finding enough markers then finding the distance between them all. Note that these markers are typically not genes, since there are so few genes in the human genome. The oldest type of marker is a Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP, say “rifflip”). One nucleotide can make the difference in phenotype that causes the polymorphism, which is manifest in restriction enzyme digests of a specific subset of genomic DNA. A mutation in a restriction site will cause the enzyme not to be able to cut there, and therefore a different banding pattern will be observed. RFLP pedigrees can be used to track the flow of chromosomes and genes through generations in a family. 54 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY As useful as RFLPs are, they too do not appear frequently enough in the genome to construct a complete map. Simple Sequence Length Polymorphisms (SSLP, say “sisslip”) are genetic markers that appear even more frequently than RFLPs and can be used to construct more complete genetic maps. They consist of two unique flanking sequences and a variable number of repetitions of a two or three nucleotide sequence. The number of repeats varies from individual to individual in a population, yet is transmitted with high fidelity from generation to generation. The structure of SSLPs means that individuals can be rapidly genotyped at a certain locus using PCR. In addition, simple pedigree analysis will reveal the map distance between two such loci. 2.1.6 Radiation Hybrid Maps These maps were constructed not by using pedigree analysis, but by physically shearing human DNA into bits, facilitating a “physical map” on the order of nucleotides. This technique is used somehow with Bacterial Artificial Chromosome contruction to facilitate an accurate genetic map. 2.1.7 DNA Fingerprinting Best witnessed in the awe-inspiring 242 well gels that need to be run, this technique is used to uniquely indentify an individual based on characterization of many genetic markers. The more genetic markers that are used, the more specific the profile of the individual. 2.1.8 The Genome Projects It was decided in the late 1980s that the federal government would spend about $1 per base to sequence the human genome. The federal team of researchers appointed to the task wanted 6-10 years to complete the project. J. Craig Venter noticed the federal research teams basically laying down on the job, and founded the biotech company Celera Genomics. Venter claimed he could sequence the human genome in one year, and told the federal team to instead work on the mouse genome. 2.2. HUMAN DISEASE GENES 55 The federal team’s strategy was to map, shred, map, shred, then sequence. Then, using careful scrutiny of the constructed maps and genetic markers, the sequenced DNA molecules could be put in relation to one another. Venter’s idea was different. He did away with the inital mapping steps and immediately shred the genome into small, sequencable pieces for his method, deemed Shotgun Sequencing. The fastest computer in the world and a complex algorithm were used to piece these sequenced pieces together, and Venter was successful in completing the genome on time. Venter was successful in constructing a human genome, and his model of genome construction was used in every subsequent genome project. However, with the genome project Nobel still unassigned, the question of who deserves credit needs to be addressed. Some argue that Venter used public mapping data developed by the federal project to achieve his end goal, and so some credit needs to be awarded to the federal team. Read about the controversy in Shreve’s Genome War and Sulston’s The Common Thread . 2.1.9 Other Projects Gene Ontology is an online database that seeks to fully characterize what is known about every gene, using primarily genome wide expression profiling for large scale analysis. The human genome was originally predicted to contain about 100,000 genes. However, these estimates were incorrect, and we now know the figure to be close to 20,000 genes. 2.2 Human Disease Genes Human genetic diseases, such as Huntington’s chorea, are often lethal, debilitating and awful. 2.2.1 Classes There are three principal classes of genetic diseases: 1. Monogenic, in which a defect in one gene causes a disease 2. Diseases “with a genetic component” such as heart disease 3. Abnormal ploidy conditions, such as trisomy 21 and cancers 56 2.2.2 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY Alkaptonura Archibald Garrod applied Mendel’s laws in 1902 to discover that Alkaptonuria was a monogenic disease. 2.2.3 Sickle Cell Anemia James B. Herrick in 1910 noticed the unusual red blood cells typical of Sickle Cell Anemia. The primary symptom of this disease is widespread pain and the only treatment is morphine, which induces addiction. Since he realized that red blood cells were not much more than a physiological sack of hemoglobin, Linus Pauling investigated the hemoglobin of the sickle cells and found that it has a different charge than normal hemoglobin. In the third most famous paper in molecular biology, Vern Ingram wrote in Nature in 1956 a paper that established that the difference Pauling noticed was due to one peptide being less negatively charged in the sickle cell hemoglobin [6]. 2.2.4 Mouse Models Identifying human genes that follow simple Mendelian inheritance patterns is a straightforward process. Inheritance of human disease can be modeled in mouse, since they have many similar proteins and a similarly sized genome. The “batface” mutant is a point mutation that causes a developmental defect in the mouse’s face. With linkage mapping, such single gene mutants can be functionally mapped within about a month. Based on rules studied in the first part of this class, it is easy to determine the map distance of the batface gene to other genes with which it is coinherited. To facilitate this rapid recognition, homozygous mice are needed. Luckily for geneticists, William Ernest Castle initiated a program of making mice homozygous for everything (i.e. 99.98% of all loci) many years ago. After about 40 generations of inbreeding, this level of homozygosity is acheived. Note that these mice are homozygous for RFLPs, SSLPs, and other genetic markers as well as functional genes. Now, if one of these mice is bred to another inbred mouse with a different set of homozygous alleles, a nearly uniform heterozygote will result. If 2.2. HUMAN DISEASE GENES 57 this heterozygote is test crossed, recombination can be observed, and simple counts of recombinant progeny will facilitate an estimate of map distance from your mutant gene to the closest marker. Specifically, find the marker with the highest frequency in mutant progeny, and that is the closest locus to the mutant gene. 2.2.5 Human Crosses? One problem with doing mutant analysis in humans is that it is impossible to set up crosses due to ethical issues of common sense. How, then, is the heritability of genetic disease analyzed in humans? The solution is to examine large families of known genotype. It is possible to use a likelihood ratio test statistic to get a idea of the relative likelihood of linkage of a certain disease gene to a known marker based on simple pedigree and genotype data. In humans, the mutation in the CF gene was identified by comparing the sequence to that of other animals, of which the expressed sequences should be conserved but the noncoding regions should be not. This facilitated rapid identification via hybridization. Also, the mutant CF allele was compared to the wild-type human CF allele. The point mutation responsible for the mutant phenotype 70% of the time is an alteration of δ508Phe in the 250kb CFTR gene. Gene therapy with lentivirus (HIV/Ebola) is used to insert a wild-type copy of the CFTR gene in the ideal case. However, this is impossible since the tissue that needs to be transformed, the lungs, are covered in a huge layer of mucus. Contrary to the proclamation of our textbook, the phenotype of CFTR mice does not resemble human phenotype [5]. In fact, according to Fyodor Urnov, the mice have found a way to avoid the CF phenotype and live completely healthy, even with a complete deletion of this gene. 2.2.6 Carrier Screening A population of Ashkenazi jews were genotyped for an array of heritable diseases that was observed to be present in the population. Many of these horrible diseases, such as Tay-Sachs, have no cure and result in death at an early age, so many families in which the parents were both carriers decided not to risk having a child. 58 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY There are severe ethical and moral questions that need to be asked about carrier screening a specific racial subset of a population, but they are not to be answered here. 2.2.7 X-Linked SCIDs By far the worst immunological disorder is the X-linked Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, which manifests itself in 6-8 month old boys, rendering their immune systems useless. The only treatment is the expensive bone marrow transplant: 1. Anesthetize the boy 2. Surgically remove 15-30mL of bone marrow 3. Transform these cells with a virus that has a wild-type allele 4. Insert cells back into the boy Using this trial method, six of seven babies were cured of SCID. However, 2 of these babies got leukemia, and died. Consequently, the trials were put on hold, since the FDA would not approve a treatment that could cause leukemia, a cruel and unusual punishment. More recently, trials were reinitiated with increased precautions, but another baby came down with leukemia. Trials are again at a standstill. 2.3 2.3.1 Cancer Retinoblastoma Contrary to what is pictured in texts, the early-onset cancer Retinoblastoma (RB) ends up causing malignant growths in the entire head, not just the eye. Knudson proposed the two-hit model in 1971 to statistically explain how the retinoblastoma disorder is inherited [8]. He noticed that RB occurs sporadically in the general population but sometimes a predisposition to the disorder is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Therefore, he postulated two distinct conditions that would induce RB: 2.3. CANCER 59 1. Inheriting one “susceptibility” mutant allele, later called pRB, which requires only one hit — knocking out the function of the other allele — to induce cancer 2. Inheriting two wild-type alleles but having them both knocked out in two hits by mutations As an aside, Knudson cleverly modeled the number of cancers as a function of time for a given individual as a Poisson process, with startlingly accurate agreement with data. 2.3.2 Alterations in Cancer Cells There are six essential changes which a normal cell must undergo, in no particular order, to change into a cancer cell: 1. Increased sensitivity to growth signals 2. Decreased sensitivity to anti-growth signals 3. Evasion of apoptosis 4. Tissue invasion 5. Sustained angiogenesis 6. Limitless replicative potential 2.3.3 Heterogeneity of Cancer There are so many different types of cancer, and each one has a uniquely aneuploid genome. In fact, one of the only things common to all cancers is the genome instability that leads to cancer development. For example, Henrietta Lacks was the first extensive case study of cervical cancer. Cancer cells from her cervix were cultured for study, named HeLa, and continue to grow in laboratories worldwide. SKY was used to identify the chromosomes of normal versus HeLa cells. Because of genome instability, HeLa cells were severely aneuploid with abnormally structured chromosomes. 60 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 2.3.4 Genetic Cancer Causation There are two primary classes of cancer related genes: 1. Oncogenes: gain-of-function genes which are usually involved in cell growth and will induce cancer with only one allele present 2. Tumor Suppressors: loss-of-function genes which are usually involved in homeostasis and will induce cancer only with two mutant alleles present These genetic changes result in a self-sufficiency for growth in cancer cells that is usually only reserved for these cell types: 1. Bone marrow 2. Skin 3. Epithelium 4. Germ cells This growth requires something obvious: cell division. Every cancer cell must be able to divide in order to proliferate and overtake its host. 2.3.5 Cell Division Cycle Hartwell studied budding yeast growth — specifically, cell division cycle mutants — to determine, ultimately, the molecular basis of the cell division cycle, which, among other things, is instrumental to the development of cancer. He received the Nobel Prize in PM in 2001. Gleaning such interesting knowledge from such uninteresting model organisms (yeast) points out the great significance and impact of basic research on the advancement of practical knowledge. Hartwell performed many forward genetic screens, techniques which involved two key tricks: 1. Temperature sensitive mutants 2. Replica plating 2.3. CANCER 61 Using these two methods, he could isolate yeast strains that were mutant in the cell division cycle but not dead. The method of detection was first published by Hartwell in 1970 [4]. The stage at which the cells were uniformly arrested is the stage when the mutated protein is required to advance the cell cycle. The gene cdc28 was identified as the gene responsible for initiation of cell division, at the phase dubbed “start.” This is when the cell commits to division, an event critical to carcinogenesis. The human homolog of cdc28 is CDK1, a cyclin dependent kinase, so named because its functionality is regulated by cyclins, a class of proteins related to the cell division cycle. Since cdc28 and CDK1 are so perfectly conserved, yeast modeling of the human cell division cycle is very effective. 2.3.6 Oncogenes Mutations in the signaling pathway from the cell growth receptor to the gene promoter binding elements are the primary cause of the prolific and detrimental growth characteristic of cancer. Receptor Tyrosine Kinases (RTKs) such as Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) fall into a class of genes called Proto-Oncogenes, or genes which, when mutated, act dominantly to cause cancer. These mutations usually take the form of alterations or deletions to binding domains that cause the protein to become constitutively active, losing regulation of their extracellular or intracellular domains. When these genes are mutated, they are referred to as Oncogenes. An example of a proto-oncogene is the human Ras, which becomes an oncogene when it loses its GTP hydrolysis ability. For example, in Burkitt’s Lymphoma, a translocation results in the generation of a chimeric oncogene whose coding region is normal but whose transcription is constitutively on. The affected gene is called Myc, is responsible for signaling cell division, and is usually activated only briefly. Myc affects cell division in all cell types but only creates a tumor in white blood cells since they are proliferating. In summary, there are three primary proto-oncogene classes: 1. Growth factor receptors 2. Signaling proteins 62 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 3. Promoter binding elements In Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia, another condition initiated by a genomic translocation, increased myelination results in cancerous development. This is one of the only cancer types that is treatable with a rationally developed chemical, Gleevec. By chemical optimization and progressive elaboration of structure, the drug has been perfected and is effective in reducing the mortality rate for this type of cancer to 5% for those people who take 400mg of this drug per day. In some types of breast cancer, another RTK, her2, can be targeted by herceptin, a mouse monoclonal human antibody which engages the human immune system to attack the cancer. This is also an effective and highly specific treatment. In contrast, most chemotherapy drugs such as Cisplatin and Taxol indiscriminantly tear apart the body, destroying any cells that they encounter. These treatments have large, unpleasant side effects and are highly unspecific. 2.3.7 Tumor Suppressors The function of Tumor Suppressor proteins was first described by Ephrussi in 1969 [3]. Examples of tumor suppressors include: 1. p53 2. pRB Every cancer has both alleles of both genes inactivated. Question 5 Is this really valid? There must be exceptions. This suggests another interpretation of “two-hit” models of cancer: tumors will only form when both tumor suppressors have been knocked out and at least one oncogene has been turned on. There are many ways for genes to become mutant: 1. Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in tobacco smoke bind DNA in lungs 2. Aflatoxin is found in moldy peas and binds to liver cell DNA 2.4. GENETICS OF HUMAN DIVERSITY 63 3. UV light directly fuses two adjacent Thymine bases 4. DNA is naturally methylated in eukaryotes, but this modification increases the rate of mutation for Cytosine bases Thus, a clear connection is established between what happens to you and what happens to p53, which ultimately means your rate of carcinogenesis. When p53 is mutated, it is the exception among tumor suppressors since the mutation acts genetically dominant, whereas most tumor suppressors can act with only one functional allele. Haploinsufficiency in p53 occurs as a result of p53’s usual action as a tetramer. If any one of the four subunits in the full complex are mutated, then a nonfunctional p53 complex will result. This results in effectively invalidating 15/16 of all p53 complexes formed. The reason that pRB heterozygotes are actually more susceptible to cancer than wild-type individuals is because the pRB protein is involved in mutation suppression. In the heterozygote, only half as much pRB is functional, so mutations occur at twice the normal rate. If one of these mutations is in the other pRB allele, complete loss of pRB is sustained. In breast cancer, estrogen acts as a potent carcinogen and morphogen of the breast. Some drugs such as Premarin have been developed to combat breast cancer, but evidence of their effectiveness is minimal. In some inherited forms of breast cancer, the genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 are mutated. The only treatment for these inherited types and other spontaneously generated breast cancers are masectomy and ovarectomy. For some reason women who have these mutant alleles and who exercise in their adolescent years are much less susceptible to this inherited form of breast cancer. 2.4 2.4.1 Genetics of Human Diversity Introduction The genetics of human diversity can be summarized by the fact that the physical differences between individuals can be largely attributed to differences in DNA. One interesting example of a physical difference is race, which is visually easy but genetically difficult to distinguish. The study is motivated by two recent events: 1. Harvard Professor Summers’ suggestion that women are inherently less likely to be apt mathematical thinkers than men 64 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 2. The first drug that has been developed for deployment to a specific race, “Bidil” Duster offers a good review of the subject in his paper “Race and reification in science” [2]. These are a few of the issues involved with the inheritance of race: 1. What is the nature of the inheritance of the phenotype of interest? 2. What is inherited along with the phenotype of interest? 3. Is race one among these? 4. If the inheritance of this phenotype is relevant to public health, what are the social and medical effects of this knowledge? 5. What general statements can and can not be made on the basis of race? 2.4.2 Examples For example, in the United States, sickle cell hemoglobin is an African American disease; 80,000 members of this population have the disease. In contrast, effectively no non-African Americans have this disease. This creates a clear distinction for this disease and a race which is not recapitulated for other diseases. Another relevant example is Acute Macular Degeneration (AMD), which causes affected individuals to be unable to see anything in the middle of their field of view and see the periphery without focus. Since this disease is prevalent in the rapidly growing elderly population, it is of utmost importance to public policymakers. A large number of families were genotyped and the gene responsible for the disease’s inheritance was found to be proximal to cytological band 1q32. The two SNPs that were most probably involved with the disorder were found on complement factor H. Individuals with these SNPs were found to be, on average, 7.4 times more likely to contract AMD. Humans are the only animal that drink milk past infancy. The ability to digest milk beyond infancy is genetically inherited, with Northern Europeans seemingly the only population that persisted with the lactase Haplotype. This suggests that the European lactase gene had, at some point in the past, some selective advantage based on the additional nutrients it supplied. However, an alternate interpretation is that perhaps Europeans became the 2.4. GENETICS OF HUMAN DIVERSITY 65 only culture that drank milk precisely because they had the expression of lactase as adults. 2.4.3 Race-Based Medicine? Between individuals, the incidence of different bases is ≈ 1×10−4 . Therefore, two randomly selected people will have, on average, 2-3 million bases different. Jorde and Wooding make the point that race and ancestry are correlated but may not necessarily be used as correlates of other genetically inherited traits, such as disease loci [7]. They conclude that genotyping for specific disease loci is a much more effective technique for establishing genotype than racial profiling. In his studies in 1972, Richard Lewontin found that most of the genetic variation (≈ 85%) between individuals is explained by differences within a race, and only a small amount (≈ 15%) is explained by variations between races [9]. In 2004, the human genome project confirmed this on a large scale. Question 6 How did they “confirm”? What was the definition of race? Answer: Lewontin defined it as one of three categories of origin: Africa, Europe, Asia. Since humans are so attuned to deduce intrinsic differences in things from extrinsic differences in things, we don’t intuitively realize the similarities between perceived races. In fact, most of the variation in the human species is within populations in Africa. That is, at some point in the past, a common ancestor of modern humans left Africa and formed colonies in other parts of the world relatively recently. In response to the issue at hand, race is genetic, but due to the quantitative nature of its inheritance, there is no simple law that governs it. The social fear is having the genotype of someone else of your race be applied to you even though that would be totally fallacious. Apparently USA Today writers and insurance companies would prefer this cheaper alternative to universal genotyping. A large number of people were genotyped for a recent study. A computer blindly clustered the genotypes and succeeded at classifying them, on average, into the three categories of origin mentioned above. However, there are a few problems with this study: 66 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 1. Only a highest likelihood tree was constructed. Most individuals are of intermediate genetic race. 2. Pharmacogenomics such as the advent of the first race-based drug, BiDil, is promoting racial drug administration when we know that most disease alleles inherited independently of race. One example of this fallacious application of race to treat disease is the inhertied mutation in Angiotensinogen, which is associated with a 10-20% increase risk of heart disease. This gene is clearly not inherited with race. 2.5 Inheritance of Quantitative Traits Qualitative traits such as blood type are easy to genetically characterize since they follow simple Mendelian inheritance laws. On the other hand, quantitative traits, such as hair, eye, or skin color, differ in that they are controlled by many loci. 2.5.1 Pseudoscience Some complex behaviors are commonly explained by attributing their inheritance to genetics, but this could not be further from the truth. The “folk wisdom” that says certain abilities “run in the family” is merely a pseudoscience. For example, the New York Times ran a story about how it seemed the ability to start businesses “ran in the family” for a certain group of people. Also, the great musician Suzanne Vega claimed her daughter must be prolific musically due to genetics. There has even been a publication of a “God gene,” VMAT2, which apparently is associated with increased spirituality. These examples are all total BS, and can all be attributed to nature versus nurture. As an analog, consider Fermat’s Last Theorem, which has gone unproven for centuries but was finally proven in the last decade. It states that there are no solutions to the equation xn + y n = z n for n > 2. It is a simple concept to understand, but certainly not to prove. That said, it is apparent that you don’t have to fully understand something to argue about it. Most ignorance is willful. 2.5. INHERITANCE OF QUANTITATIVE TRAITS 2.5.2 67 Quantitative Traits Quantitative traits will be normally distributed in a population. This result is very easy to show, using the central limit theorem, even with a simple trait that depends on only three loci. Certainly, height is a quantitative trait. Also, it is clear that language is not a quantitative trait, since any child may be taught any language. Is there any validity to the claim that neuroticism is a quantitative trait? As an analogous example, consider the disease pellegra, which in 1910 was deemed Mendelian in the U.S. South. Later, it was determined that the disease was actually caused by a niacin deficiency. This suggests a simple test to see if a characteristic is a quantitative trait. Simply put the progeny of people at the extremes of the quantitative spectrum in the same environment, and see if they develop similarly or extremely differently. However, for humans, this test is not feasible. There are three things essential to quantitative traits: 1. Metric 2. Meristic, the ability to break it down into components or segments (ie loci) 3. Threshhold This means a meaningful method of measurement is necessary for quantifying quantitative traits. For example, an inebriometer was built to quantify how tolerant flies were to alcohol. Going back to our question about neuroticism, it is apparent upon close inspection that it is in fact pseudoscience. Two alleles are present in the general population for the serotonin receptor, which is the supposed implicator of neuroticism. But how does one measure neuroticism? Some attempted to by using a questionnaire with such subjective questions that the results were totally unscientific. There was one study of fMRI of anxiety in response to stress which had a very inconclusive result but was cited as though it was truth. This is getting out of hand. In contrast, in mouse models, it is easy to measure anxiety objectively. There are two metrics: 1. Open field activity 68 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 2. Open field defecation In 1998, Dean Hamer tried to argue that there probably existed genes for any human behavior X. However, this is pseudoscience since, although there are genetic components to almost everything in human life, there is no objective metric for most of these quantitative traits and the effects of environment on development are far too complex to assign a simple genetic model of inheritance. The principal reasons Hamer misunderstands the reality of genetics is that most of the behavioral traits have 1. No good metric 2. No distinction between “genetic” and “inevitable” 3. Hundreds of other genes may affect the phenotype of one gene which is “associated” with a certain phenotype The government and insurance companies will misunderstand this and we will all be screwed! One quantitative trait that is easy to examine in mice is body weight. Cross a fat mouse with a small mouse and then mate the brothers and sisters of that cross. Genotype the grandchildren for a bunch of loci and see which ones are inherited with fatness. About 100 loci were identified across the mouse genome as being inherited with fatness. The effect of each of these genes is negligable for the entire phenotype of fatness. This is precisely why statements such as “gene X predisposes people to condition Y ” are meaningless, or, at the very least, need to be taken with a grain of salt. An interesting phenomenon is the Norm of Reaction, in which some environmental stimuli has an effect on development, gene expression, and ultimate adult phenotype. For example, in flies, the size of the eyes depends on the temperature to which the fly is exposed during development. In humans, we have already discussed the example that shows women who exercise in their teens are less susceptible to inherited forms of breast cancer. For all of these reasons, and due to the lack of a definition, it is meaningless to claim a trait is X% determined by nature and Y % determined by nurture. Similarly, the following problems exist in the claim that there is a gene X “for” a quantitative trait Y : 2.6. BACTERIAL GENETICS 69 1. “For” is a misleading word used in the wrong context 2. The number of loci involved is usually enormous 3. The norm of reaction must be considered 4. The morality of these statements can never be judged by science a la Gould 2.6 Bacterial Genetics The study of “bacterial” genetics is, in many respects, nominal only. So much about bacteria has taught us about ourselves through the unity of life. Bacterial genetics is an excellent example of how basic research can have a profound effect on our understanding of more complex biological and medical concepts. 2.6.1 Classical Genetics In his Nobel lecture, T.H. Morgan asked, in a physical sense, “What are the genes?” His own response in the same lecture was that “a geneticist has not much concern” for the physical nature of the gene. The experimental methods and theory of classical genetics were unaffected by and uninterested in physical genetics. 2.6.2 Rise of Molecular Genetics In the mid-1930s, geneticists’ views began to change, and they realized that finding the physical nature of the gene was of interest. Remember that Crick originally proposed the theory of DNA −→ RNA −→ Protein and attached the name “central dogma” to it because there was no evidence for it at the time. All the evidence for the central dogma was worked out in the two decades between 1945 and 1965, using the experimental models of bacteria and phage. 70 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 2.6.3 Bacterial Virus Resistance Fifty years ago, biology did not recognize humans to be fundamentally the same as bacteria. That is, they did not recognize the fact that both were organisms that used DNA as the genetic material with the same genetic code and produced other organisms like themselves. The Bacteriophage viral life cycle starts when a virus finds a suitable bacterial host. It injects its viral DNA through the bacterial membrane into the bacterial cytosol, where it is made into a transcript and then translated into self-assembling viral proteins. These proteins cooperatively assemble more viruses using the bacterium’s proteins and energy, and finally lyse the bacterium when enough viruses have been made. The cycle repeats when one of these new viruses finds a suitable bacterial host. In the early 1930s, biologists observed that, when treated with phage, some bacteria resist infection. During the next two decades, many biologists devoted their lives to finding out how and why. The essential experiment to prove that bacterial virus resistance is inherited was first performed by Salvador Luria and Max Delbrück. They studied bacterial virus resistance at Cold Spring Harbor, NY, after fleeing from World War II in Europe. The prevailing belief of the conventional bacteriologist during their initial work was that exposure to antibacterial agents caused some bacteria to acquire the characteristic of resistance, which somehow could be passed down to subsequent generations. However, this hypothesis reeked of Lamarckism, so was rejected by Luria. At a faculty dance, Luria found the inspiration for the design of the critical experiment in the faculty gambling on the slot machines. There were two hypotheses, of which one needed to be proven true and the other false: 1. Somehow the phage induces resistance in the bacteria 2. Some bacteria are already resistant to phage because they have inherited a resistance gene The experiment was performed with two experimental setups: 1. One bacterium was assigned to each test tube 2. Many bacteria were assigned to each test tube 2.6. BACTERIAL GENETICS 71 Many test tubes of each setup were grown up. The result was that, after treatment with phage, there was great variation in the growth of the clonal tubes which sprang from the single cell. In contrast, there was somewhat of a uniform growth in tubes which sprang from the large sample of cells. These results implied that some bacteria were “born” with the innate ability to resist viral infection. That is, they have a gene for viral resistance that they inherited from the chromosomes of their parents and will pass on to the chromosomes of their progeny. 2.6.4 One Gene-One Enzyme Hypothesis The one gene-one enzyme hypothesis, first proposed by Beadle and Tatum, was verified by the critical experiments on Neurospora crassa. This was the experiment that proved the interrelation of biochemistry and genetics. A student of Tatum’s, Joshua Lederberg, tried to apply the results of Beadle and Tatum’s fungi investigations to bacteria. His experiment involved two sets of bacteria: 1. Leucine and thiamine auxotrophs 2. Biotin and cysteine auxotrophs He mixed these two strains of bacteria, and looked for new phenotypes. Luckily, he saw that new phenotypes did arise, and that this spontaneous phenotype generation required physical contact of the bacteria. This physical contact, initially discovered by Lederberg around 1945, was later dubbed Conjugation. Before 1962, the biological community thought bacteria carried out sexual reproduction. That’s right. They had no idea there was a fundamental difference between prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Streptomycin was discovered in 1962 and it served as the first successful treatment for tuberculosis. It is a chemical agent that kills a bacterium very efficiently when it tries to replicate. Hayes used streptomycin in the Lederberg experiment to show the difference between sexuality and conjugation. Effectively, his experiment set up two sets of bacterial crosses where he found that a specific strain needed to have the streptomycin resistance gene in order to eventually confer resistance onto the entire colony. Another result that the experiment showed was that the F factor codes for the pilus building and genetic transfer phenotype in bacteria. 72 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY 2.6.5 The Operon Before Jacob and Monod formulated the operon model of gene regulation, the existing hypothesis was that lactose acts positively via an inducer which activates ribosomes. A first experiment performed was genetic bacterial crosses involving the creation of artificial diploids for the LacZ and LacI genes. The cross was as follows: z + i+ M × z − i− F : z +/− i+/− The simplest possible explanation in this experiment is that if gene I codes for an inducer then it will always be active, causing lactase synthesis, regardless of the presence of sugar. However, the data contradict this simple interpretation. The amount of β-galactosidase made was measured as a function of time after mating. For the control sample in which lactose was present, the bacteria made a lot of β-gal over a period of time. For the experimental sample of bacteria with no lactose, the unexpected result that they produced a little β-gal for two hours, then the amount produced leveled off. So, at the end of the experiment the double heterozygote was not making any β-gal, so the inducibility seems to be dominant. There are a couple problems in this interpretation: 1. Normally you would deduce that i− is a loss-of-function gene. In this i− is a gain-of-function mutation. 2. Why does the leveling off take 2 hours to effect? The investigators used a control experiment to determine a key fact that help them formulate the operon model. They reversed the direction of the cross: z + i+ F × z − i− M : z +/− i+/− The result of this cross was that there was no initial β-gal synthesis without lactose. But, the same result was expected, since the resultant bacteria have the same genotypes! 2.6. BACTERIAL GENETICS 73 The key fact to realize is that only DNA is transferred in bacterial conjugation, not cytoplasm. Therefore, something in the i− cytoplasm makes the transient β-gal synthesis happen. Jacob and Monod used this chain of experimentation and logic — later referred to as the PaJaMo experiment — to deduce the operon model: the I gene is a repressor, not an inducer! 2.6.6 Cis-Trans Test Ed Lewis developed the complementation test, also known as the cis-trans test. Genes cis to one another are on the the same chromosome, and genes trans to one another are on different chromosomes. Jacob and Monod constructed partial diploids in bacteria which could be tested in this way. The operon hypothesis predicts that the repressor binds DNA, so if the DNA is mutated, the repressor should be unable to bind. To prove the validity of the hypothesis, a double dominant i+ i+ bacterial strain was constructed. Then, statistically, if the phenotype is constitutive galactosidase activity, it is more likely that the region of DNA where the repressor binds is mutated than both the repressor genes being knocked out. 2.6.7 Determining the Suppressor The suppressor was originally thought to be a RNA. An experiment was perforemed by biochemists in which they inhibited protein synthesis yet still observed repression. They deduced that the repressor must therefore be RNA. A more conclusive genetic experiment revealed that the suppressor really was a protein. Geneticists induced a “nonsense suppressor” mutation in the stop tRNA in one strain of E. coli. Then, they created many constitutively active (i− ) strains of E. coli. These were then mated to the nonsense suppressor strain, and one of the strains was seen to restore somewhat of the wild-type phenotype. Therefore, they deduced that the suppressor must be a protein. 74 CHAPTER 2. GENETICS IN SOCIETY Chapter 3 Analysis Techniques 3.1 3.1.1 Themes in Genetics Introduction One of the major themes of genetics is the distinction of the discipline from biochemistry. Though biochemistry and genetics are completely useful on their own, the union of the two provides greater results than the sum of the parts. It has been suggested that proteins have been, or can be, generated, which can act to dictate changes in DNA. Thus, such a system would be a form of accelerated evolution and could be, possibly, controlled by artificial selection. However, the real question for us humans before we undertake such an endeavor, is whether such a system is evolutionarily stable. 3.1.2 Distinctions Morgan thought of genetics as an abstraction without any sort of chemical reality. We shall think of genetics as a science that defines functional questions that should be answered by other disciplines, for example biochemistry. There is also another section of genetics called reverse genetics, which has only been around since the integration of genetics with biochemistry. Reverse genetics is concerned with the identification of the function of a biomolecule that has been isolated by biochemists. 75 76 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES 3.1.3 Relevance of the Mendelian Test The operational definition of a gene is “a difference that makes a difference.” What this really means is “a gene where a change in the allele can affect a change in a trait.” Thus, genetics is actually the study of breeding behavior and embryonic development, not necessarily how genes affect physical appearance. An alternate segregational definition of alleles is based on the three classes you get out of a simple Mendelian monohybrid cross. Consider the following questions: 1. You have isolated a purebreeding wild-type and a purebreeding mutant strain of some organism. Is a single gene responsible for this difference? 2. You have isolated two purebreeding mutant strains m1 and m2. Are the genes responsible for the difference in phenotype actually two alleles of the same gene? 3. Linkage mapping. Is intragenic recombination different than intergenic recombination? You can test these questions with the complementation test. Cross the purebreeding mutants with one another. There are two possible results: One Gene m1/m2 No wild-type progeny will ever be bred from these individuals. Two Genes m1 + / + m2 Of the sixteen genotypic classes that may result from breeding, some will be wild-type. The important distinction in this example is that breeding behavior can be used to determine genotype, rather than simple appearance. Now consider the third question. Pseudoalleles are parts of a gene that can recombine. An organism with two mutant alleles in a gene with two pseudoalleles can therefore theoretically restore wild-type functionality by simple recombination. This observation stimulates the operational definition of a gene as a unit of segregation rather than a unit of function. 3.2. VIRAL GENETICS 3.2 3.2.1 77 Viral Genetics Introduction Viral genetics is worthy to study because high resolution genetic maps can be constructed, as will be explained. 3.2.2 T4 Plaque Morphology T4 is a bacteriophage of which its plaque morphology can be easily studied in culture. Additionally, its plaque morphology was found to be a genetically determined trait. A Plaque is essentially a hole in bacterial growth on a plate where a virus has been successful in infecting and replicating in the bacteria, forming about 1 × 106 virus particles. Plaque formation can be influenced by such factors as the host bacterial strain and temperature. In 1948, Hershey carried out the following experiment with T4 and two strains of Escherichia coli. He worked with rapid lysis (r) mutants and saw the following viral plaque size: T4 rII+ rII− E. coli B Small Big E. coli K12 Small None It was about this time that Tom Kline offered us the insight that “If you’re not confused, you’re not learning genetics.” 3.2.3 Viral Complementation The equivalent of a viral complementation test is acheived with a High Multiplicity of Infection (MOI) experiment in which many copies of two viral strains are introduced to the nonpermissive host. If there are two complementation groups for these genes, rIIA and rIIB, then we can establish complementation with the cis-trans test. Let us first assume that we have isolated a new rD mutation that is dominant. Is it in the same gene as rIIA, which is a loss of function gene? We can use the cis-trans test to find out. We know that a high MOI with rD and wild-type or even rIIA virus results in the dominant rD mutant phenotype. Do a high MOI experiment with rD and rIIA to create a virus with these two loci in cisto find out if 78 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES they are in the same gene. If they are, then the rIIA should knock out the function of the gene, negating the fact that the rD mutation is present on the same allele. Since a wild-type allele should also be present, wild-type phenotype will be observed. In contrast if they are on different genes, then the dominant rD mutant phenotype should show up. The point of course is twofold: Different Genes Not doing something is recessive to doing something Same Gene Doing nothing is dominant to doing something This implies the generalized complementation test: Different Genes cis = trans Same Gene cis 6= trans 3.2.4 Reverting the Dominance As discussed in the previous section, dominant mutations are recessive to recessive alleles at different loci of the same gene (think about it). You can establish that restoration of wild-type phenotype from dominant mutant phenotype is actually due to intragenic function deactivation by performing the technique known as Reverting the Dominance. For example, consider the following series: Phenotype Allele 1 Allele 2 D D + + Dr + r Dr Dr Note that D is dominant, r is recessive, and + denotes wild-type. The dominance can be reverted if one r is inactivated. 3.3 3.3.1 Importance of Mutations Benzer’s Deductions Seymour Benzer made the following deductions about chromosomes from genetic experiments with T4: 3.3. IMPORTANCE OF MUTATIONS 79 1. Contiguous, linear 2. Since recombination in genes is observed just like recombination between genes, Cistrons (the old word for “gene”) can be adjacent 3. The smallest non-zero genetic distance was found to be 0.02cM, about 2-3 bases 3.3.2 Deletion Mapping Deletions were initially inferred from shortening of map distances between known genes. Sydney Brenner and Francis Crick used Benzer’s map to learn about the genetic code’s features: 1. Triplet 2. Reading frame 3. Degenerate Take, for example, the following system, consisting of gene A which is upstream of gene B: • Frameshift mutation in A causes the genotype A− B + . Transcription is started anew at the promoter of gene B so its product is unaffected. • Deletion mutant that fuses the A and B genes results in the genotype A− B + . • The previous deletion mutant, plus a frameshift mutation in gene A results in the genotype A− B − . Frameshifted transcription proceeds to gene B since it is fused with A and so none of the bases of B are read in the proper reading frame. • Deletion mutant that fuses genes A and B, and also a point mutation in gene A results in the genotype A− B + . Point mutations do not alter the reading frame of B even though the genes are fused. In fact, it is likely that the point mutation does not result in a functional or structural change in A. 80 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES • Deletion mutant that fuses genes A and B, and also a nonsense mutation in gene A results in genotype A− B − . Suppressing this mutation (i.e. with stop tRNA mutation) results in restoration of A− B + genotype. • Only the nonsense mutation in gene A results in the genotype A− B + . Nonsense suppression results in genotype A+ B + . Since in this case genes A and B are not fused, the nonsense mutation only lasts until the end of the gene. Transcription is begun anew at the promoter of gene B. The real point of these deletion mapping experiments is not on the mutations themselves but rather how to infer how the normal system works from the information you gain by examining the mutants. You need an observable, heritable difference to define a gene. 3.3.3 Mutagenesis Mutations are defined by the following characteristics: 1. Molecular nature of change 2. Extent of gene it changes (point versus chromosomal) 3. Effect on organism (phenotype, lethality, sterility, etc.) 4. Function change In 1934, Muller defined two categories of mutations that fundamentally could describe all mutations: Loss-of-Function 1. Usually recessive (if not, haploinsufficient) 2. Amorphic or null 3. Hypomorphic or “leaky,” in an allelic series that gets progressively more defective Gain-of-Function 1. Usually dominant 2. Hypermorphic, or too much 3. Neomorphic, or gaining a new function or site of action 4. Antimorphic, or antagonizing the wild-type function with a dominant negative phenotype 3.4. MUTATION CLASSES 3.4 Mutation Classes 3.4.1 Kline’s Sex Lethal 81 First, remember how to revert the dominance. That is, induce a dominant mutation in a gene, then revert the dominant phenotype back to wild-type by causing a recessive mutation in the same gene that is “dominant” to the original dominant mutation. Kline’s first major discovery, the Sex Lethal gene, is a good example of an odd mutation. When this mutation is expressed as a gain-of-function mutation, it is of male lethal and female rescued phenotype. As a loss-offunction mutation, it is of male normal and female lethal mutation. How shall we make sense of these results? Perhaps this is regulated by dosage of the X chromosome in embryogenesis? An intersting fact is that stop codons in flies aren’t as strictly enforced. Really, the stop “codon” is determined by the bases in the general area of the stop triplet. Additionally, in 75 Another thing to note is the distinction between dosage and phenotype. For example, consider the white eye mutation. Is this a hypomorphic loss of function mutation, or possibly a null mutation, or...? The answer to all of these questions can be determined with genetic analysis. 3.4.2 Amorphic Amorphic mutant alleles has no effect on phenotype. Increasing the wildtype dosage generates more wild-type phenotype. Increasing mutant dosage generates no change in phenotype. For example, consider the white eye mutation w in fruit fly (Table 3.1). 3.4.3 Hypomorphic Hypomorphic mutant alleles result in partial loss-of-function. Increasing the wild-type dosage generates more wild-type phenotype. Increasing the mutant dosage also generates more wild-type phenotype. For example, consider the hypomorphic mutant allele wa in fruit fly (Table 3.2). 82 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Genotype +/w w/df w/w w/w/w Phenotype Wild-type White eyes White eyes (same) White eyes (same) Table 3.1: Phenotypes of various genotypes related to the white eye mutation in fruit flies. The amorphic mutation w is a recessive loss-of-function mutation. Genotype wa /df wa /wa wa /wa /wa Phenotype Loss-of-function More function Even more function Table 3.2: Phenotypes of various genotypes of the hypomorphic loss-offunction mutant allele wa in fruit fly. 3.4.4 Hypermorphic Hypermorphic mutant alleles result in a gain-of-function phenotype. Increasing the wild-type dosage generates more mutant phenotype. Increasing the mutant dosage also generates more mutant phenotype. For example, consider the Vulval Precursor mutation lingf in C. elegans (Table 3.3). 3.4.5 Antimorphic Antimorphic mutant alleles result in a gain-of-function phenotype that suppresses normal function. Increasing the wild-type dosage generates more wild-type phenotype. Increasing the mutant dosage generates more mutant phenotype. For example, consider the ovoD mutation in the oogenesis pathway in fruit flies (Table 3.4). 3.4. MUTATION CLASSES Genotype +/+ lingf /+ lingf /df lingf /lingf lingf /+/+ 83 Phenotype B Most B, Some A B All A All A Table 3.3: Phenotypes of various genotypes of the Vulval Precursor mutation in C. elegans. The lingf allele is a dominant gain-of-function hypermorphic allele. Genotype ovoD /+ ovoD /df ovoD /+/+ Phenotype Abnormal oogenesis More abnormal More normal Table 3.4: Phenotypes of various genotypes related to the oogenesis pathway in fruit flies. The antimorphic mutant allele ovoD is a dominant gain-offunction allele. 84 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Genotype AntpNS /+ AntpNS /df AntpNS /AntpNS AntpNS /AntpNS /+ AntpNS,− /+ AntpNS,− /AntpNS,− Phenotype Antenna changes to a leg Antenna changes to a leg More mutant Same as AntpNS /AntpNS Wild-type (dominance reverted) Leg changes to antenna (embryonic lethal) Table 3.5: Phenotypes of various genotypes related to the ectopic expression of antenna genes in the leg. The neomorphic mutant allele AntpNS is a dominant gain-of-function allele. Reverting the dominance at this locus yields the loss-of-function AntpNS,− allele. Class Type Amorph Loss Hypomorph Loss Hypermorph Gain Antimorph Gain Neomorph Gain ↑wt ↑wt ↑wt ↑mut ↑wt 0 ↑mut 0 ↑wt ↑mut ↑mut ↑mut Example w wa lingf ovoD AntpNS Table 3.6: Summary of the five mutant classes and their characteristics. 3.4.6 Neomorphic Neomorphic mutant alleles result in a novel gain-of-function phenotype. Increasing the wild-type dosage does not change the phenotype. Increasing the mutant dosage generates more mutant phenotype. For example, consider the antenna to leg mutation in fruit flies (Table 3.5). This is an example of Ectopic expression, gene expression at the wrong time, place, or sex. 3.4.7 Summary The five mutant allele classes we have discussed are summarized in Table 3.6. 3.5. CONDITIONAL MUTATIONS 3.5 3.5.1 85 Conditional Mutations Introduction Conditional mutations come in a variety of flavors: 1. Auxotroph 2. Host range (i.e. virus) 3. Sex limited (i.e. ovoD , Sxl) 4. Suppression, either intragenic or intergenic Analysis of gene and allele specific interactions between genes leads to the conclusion that there are four distinct categories of intergenic interaction. We will now discuss these categories of intergenic complementation and examples of genes from each category. 3.5.2 Gene and Allele Specific One example of a gene and allele specific interaction involves heterodimers. Consider the two genes a and b. If we mutate gene a to allele a1 , we see a mutant loss-of-function phenotype. If we mutate gene b to allele b1 , we see a mutant loss-of-function phenotype. But, if we combine these mutations in a single organism with genotype a1 b1 , then we see the wild-type phenotype. Such a result implies that these two genes are gene and allele specific interaction partners that probably form a heterodimer in vivo. Another example of a gene and allele specific interaction may occur in a single gene that forms a homodimer. Consider the following example with gene c. Mutating gene c to allele c1 results in a mutant loss-of-function phenotype. Mutating gene c to allele c2 results in a (probably the same) mutant loss-of-function phenotype. However, if we combine these mutation in a single organism with genotype c1 c2 , then we see the wild-type phenotype. Such a result implies that this gene acts as a homodimer in a gene specific, allele specific manner in vivo. An interesting consequence of the previous example is the complication of the complimentation test. If we have two mutant strains X and Y , we would cross them in the trans complementation test to see if the mutations are at the same locus. Usually, if the mutations complement one another, we infer 86 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES that they are in different genes, and if the mutations fail to complement, we infer that they are in the same gene. However, this example is different, and nicely illustrates why the full cistrans test is needed sometimes. If we have the previous case, that is, X = c1 and Y = c2 , then their trans configuration will be X/Y = c1 /c2 and this will show up as a wild-type phenotype because of the gene’s gene specific, allele specfic homodimeric interaction. Without performing the cis version of the complementation test, we would infer that these mutations are in different genes, and this is certainly not the case. Of course, generating the cis version is slightly more difficult. That is, an organism with the c1,2 allele must be created, then crossed to a wild-type organism with the normal c allele. This will result in mutant progeny with genotype c1,2 /c, so we in the end infer that these two mutations in cis are dominant to the wild-type and in the same gene. 3.5.3 Gene Specific, Allele Nonspecific One example of a gene specific, allele nonspecific interaction involves the sex lethal mutation SxlML and the daughterless mutation da. A da/damother will produce only male progeny, with the female progeny of genotypes da/da, da/+, and +/+ all dying. So, what’s going on here is that counting the number of X chromosomes is the method of sex determination in Drosophila. The molecular mechanism behind this counting requires both da + and Sxl+ . But, since SxlML is a dominant gain-of-function gene that is constitutively active, it doesn’t matter what allele a female gets at the da locus. The SxlML allele is able to rescue females in this gene specific, allele nonspecific interaction. It is so called because the products of the two genes da and SxlML interact, but it doesn’t matter which allele of da the organism has, since SxlML is constitutively active. This implies da usually has a regulatory function for SxlML . 3.5.4 Gene Nonspecific, Allele Specific Consider the rII locus as an example of a gene nonspecific, allele specific interaction. With the rIIAam allele, suppression of the UAG stop codon results in functional rII product. However, with the rIIAdiff allele, suppression of the UAG stop codon results in nonfunctional rII product. This is a gene 3.5. CONDITIONAL MUTATIONS 87 nonspecific, allele specific interaction because nonsense suppression affects all genes, not just this one specifically, and only one specific allele of this gene. Consider another example, involving the hairy wing hw suppression locus in fruit flies. The secret to this mechanism is a Gypsy Enhancer Boundary that separates an enhancer from its target promoter. Specifically, when the hairy wing suppressor protein binds the gypsy element, it prevents DNA folding and the enhancer cannot access the promoter, causing no transcription to occur. First, generate a dominant cut mutant, which is adjacent to a gypsy enhancer boundary element. Then, suppress the mutation using the hairy wing suppressor, which prevents the enhancer from accessing the cut gene’s promoter, thus restoring wild-type functionality at the cut locus since no transcription of the dominant mutant allele occurs. Finally, mutation of the hairy wing suppressor gene will result in restoration of mutant cut phenotype. This interaction between the cut gene and the hairy wing suppressor gene is said to be gene nonspecific, allele specific because the suppressor can act on many different genes (any one with an adjacent gypsy enhancer boundary) but only when the allele that can bind the gypsy enhancer boundary is present. 3.5.5 Temperature Sensitive Temperature Sensitive mutations are useful because their protein products are active at one temperature and inactive at another. Temperature sensitive mutations are particularly useful by developmental geneticists, because they allow pinpointing the interval of necessity of a certain gene. By using temperature shifts, we can examine what the mutant allele does during specific period of development. For example, consider the two sets of experiments in which organisms are initially grown at the permissive termperature TP of a hypothetical gene’s protein product X, then shifted to the nonpermissive temperature TNP , or vice versa TNP →TP (Figure 3.1). First, let us consider the TNP →TP set of experiments. At time A, the temperature shift to TP results in 100% wild-type progeny, which reveals that X is not necessary before time A. At times C, D, E, the temperature shift to TP results in 0% wild-type progeny, which implies that gene X must be necessary before time C. Notice that at time B the curve is rapidly decreasing. This is the initial time point where X is necessary. Now, let us consider the TP →TNP set of experiments. At time A, B, C, 88 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES 100 Shift to permissive temperature Shift to non-permissive temperature 0 Percent Wild-Type Progeny Temperature Sensitive Mutation Survival Curves 0 A B C D E Time After Fertilization of Temperature Shift Figure 3.1: Each curve represents a different set of experiments. In the shift to nonpermissive experiments, organisms are grown from fertilization at the permissive temperature, then shifted to the nonpermissive temperature at various time points, measuring the number of progeny that survive for each shift. Likewise, in the shift to permissive experiments, organisms are initially grown at the nonpermissive temperature, then shifted to the permissive temperature. 3.6. MUTAGENESIS 89 the temperature shift to TNP results in 0% wild-type progeny, which reveals that X must be necessary after time C. At time E, the temperature shift to TNP results in 100% wild-type progeny, indicating that X is not necessary after time E. Notice that at time D the curve is rapidly increasing. This is the time point after which X is no longer necessary. The end result of this analysis is that X activity is necessary for wild-type development in the period that begins at time B and ends at time D. This method of analysis with temperature sensitive mutations reveals the specific developmental stage(s) in which a gene product’s activity is necessary. Pulsing temperature peaks is a method that can be used alongside this analysis to get a higher resolution of temporal sensitivity. 3.6 Mutagenesis 3.6.1 Introduction Spontaneous mutation has a rate which has been judged optimal by natural selection. Some genes are more prone to mutations than others. Geneticists have even isolated some Mutator mutations that drastically increase the rate of mutation throughout the genome. These genes are usually involved in genome maintenance activities, such as nucleotide repair mechanisms. Conditional mutator mutations are key genetic tools for mutagenesis. Chemical agents can also be used to be used to generate mutations: • Base analogs • Intercalating agents • Base modifying agents These agents are most effective against sperm cells. 3.6.2 Radiation Nonionizing Radiation comes from ultraviolet light and damages DNA by making thymidine dimers. Most cells have multiple independent repair pathways: 1. Light-dependent repair 90 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES 2. Light-independent repair However, these repair pathways are error prone and may lead to mutation. Ionizing Radiation comes from X, γ, or cosmic rays and usually ends up causing a double strand break. These breaks can be repaired by one of two mechanisms: • Homologous recombination • Double strand joining (Non-Homologous End Joining) There has been speculation that double strand joining is an artifact of evolution that is left over from a previous era and is no longer useful since it is rather carcinogenic. One idea to combat cancer is suppressing the NHEJ machinery. Ionizing radiation is the principal source of variation that is responsible for mutations that generate the evolution of drug resistant bacteria. 3.6.3 Mobile Genetic Elements In the 1920s, some mutations that were discovered were hard to maintain and deemed too unstable to keep in the lab. Geneticists couldn’t figure out why these certain traits displayed non-Mendelian forms of inheritance. Furthermore, the geneticist that was doing most of the research, Barbara McClintock, was hard to follow intellectually. Not many people realized the significance of her work until geneticists began to see these Transposons in other organisms than maize, her model organism. Bacterial insertion sequences of about 1-5kb are used to: 1. Insert into the organism 2. Catalyze non-homologous recombination 3. Hop into the DNA of a chromosome and grab some DNA 4. Hop out These insertion sequences are parasitic genetic elements that encode transposase and antitransposase. Many copies hopping around the genome puts the host at risk of spending too much energy on these parasites, so they have 3.7. GENETIC MOSAICS S| M P 91 M~ Normal Dysgenic P~ Normal Normal Table 3.7: Fruit fly crosses involving genes for P-elements. P flies are permissive for transposition, M are not. Dysgenic flies have a high mutation rate, multiple chromosomal rearrangements, and sterility. evolved a mechanism of limiting their reproduction to an optimal compromise between energy use of the host and reproductive potential of the parasite. It is by using these P-Elements that bacteria accomplish the rapid invention and spread of antibacterial resistance genes. Consider the fruit fly crosses in Table 3.7. One of the progeny classes suffers from PM hybrid dysgenesis, in which there is a high mutation rate, multiple chromosomal rearrangements, and sterility. I guess dysgenesis can be explained by thinking that P strains are usually stable, but when transposable elements are introduced to a genome which is not used to them, it collapses. 3.6.4 3.7 3.7.1 Balancer Chromosomes Genetic Mosaics Introduction Consider the eye in fruit fly as a model for development. It is a great model organ because mutations in the eye still generate progeny that are viable and fertile. However, there are some mutations that even this ideal model system isn’t good enough to handle. Consider the eyeless gene, which results in no eyes, but also is pleiotropic so it affects the phenotype of many other characteristics of the fly. It is pleiotropic mutations like the eyeless gene that affect the viability and fertility of the organism that motivate the use of Genetic Mosaics as a technique of genetic analysis. 92 3.7.2 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Genetic Screens A genetic mosaic is defined as an organism that developed from a zygote with one genotype, but developed into an organism that contains cells of more than one genotype. Contrast this defintion with that of a Chimera, an organism created from multiple zygotes. Consider some new mutation of interest m. Can we control its loss of heterozygosity in the organism? The first Scientific American article about genetic mosaics was posted in 1914 about a fruit fly Gynandromorph, a half male, half female organism. This example was caused by a replication error early in development. 3.7.3 Mitotic Recombination X-rays can induce Mitotic Recombination, a process in which crossingover occurs during mitosis. This is best exemplified in the following schematic, which illustrates how a Twin Spot is generated: G1 Heterozygote for both recessive mutations w and rst but since the mutant alleles are in trans they are phenotypically wild-type S Chromosomes get replicated; now the individual has two copies of each mutant allele Crossing-Over Generates two homologous replicated chromosomes, each with a chromatid with w and a chromatid with rst Cytokinesis There is then a probability of 1/2 that the cells that result from mitosis will have lost heterzygous at one of the two loci If the LOH event occurs as diagrammed during development, a twin spot of rst cells next to w cels should be generated at the site of mitotic recombination. Note that these processes can be induced by the FLP/FRT yeast system that can be transgenically introduced to fly. This system causes site-specific mitotic recombination from a 2µ plasmid. Let us return to our example of the fly eye. It is generated from 6-23 precursor cells in the larva and eventually grows to ≈ 16, 000 cells per eye. A mutation in the eye will only be seen if the mutation is Cell Autonomous, that is, if the mutation’s expression is only affected by the local cellular environment, and not neighboring cells (which may be wild-type in a mosaic). 3.7. GENETIC MOSAICS 93 Of course, a bigger effect on the final eye phenotype will be seen if the mitotic recombination event occurs earlier in development. Another trick is to screen for recessive mutations by puting a mutation that slows development on the wild-type chromosome. One such allele, a cell lethal mutation, in fly, is called the Minute. When mitotic recombination makes a homozygous minute cell, it fails to grow around the other wild-type cells, so it is effectively a cell autonomous lethal mutation. Thus, only the other chromosome’s homozygote prevails in the region, and so it can be easily identified. The minute mutation’s growth retardation also implies that minute heterozygotes will not survive in a field of wild-type homozygotes. So, instead of trying to make a minute heterozygote in a field of wild-type homozygotes, make a wild-type homozygote in a field of minute heterozygotes. 3.7.4 Maternal Effect Lethality Consider the m mutant allele, which generates phenotypically normal heterozygotes but abnormal homozygotes. Mothers with genotype m/m give birth to dead progeny in a phenomenon dubbed Maternal Effect Lethality. This is considered a strict maternal effect since homozygous males are phenotypically completely normal. The heterozygous progeny are rescuable if the death is conditional. The really bad thing about these types of mutations is that they are so hard to detect. Arbitrarily say you induced the mutation in a male fly (P). Mate with a wild-type female to generate males and females that are heterozygous (F1 ). Mate these with each other to get some progeny that are homozygous (F2 ). Finally, mate all these females (which don’t show any visible phenotype) to see if any produce dead progeny (F3 ). This gets tedious and time consuming very quickly, but there is a better solution. Genetic mosaics are the solution of course. Consider a fly whose genotype m?/+ is unknown after a mutagenesis experiment. Clone its germ line stem cells to a m/m. Then let’s also consider the ovoD cell autonomous antimorphic mutation, which sterilizes females by blocking oogenesis. The result is m/m individuals are OK, m/+ovoD individuals can’t make eggs, and +ovoD /+ovoD individuals are bad. This technique allows identification in the F2 generation. In case you haven’t noticed yet, the ovoD mutation is used, linked to the wild-type allele, to suppress the fertility of the non-target flies. Thus, only the crosses that need to be done can be done. 94 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES 3.8 3.8.1 Transient Phenocopies Motivation In some organisms, there are no genetic tools we can use. For example, in honeybees, a species with interesting behavioral patterns, there are no analytical genetic tools. In planaria, a species that is interesting due to its ability to regenerate an entire individual from half of one, there are likewise no tools available to make mutations. Sometimes, a quicker method of mutagenesis is needed than performing a full-on forward or reverse genetic screen. In these dire genetic situations, the newfound techniques of RNA Interference (RNAi ) experiments come into their own. 3.8.2 The Discovery Essentially, what RNAi does is mimic the effect of a hypomorphic mutation by treatment with a specific chemical that targets a given gene. It just so happens that the specific chemical is a Small Interfering RNA (siRNA), a double stranded RNA molecule of about 21-23b that corresponds to the gene you want to silence. Note that this can only simulate a hypomorphic mutation, not a null morph (although efforts are underway to prove the existence of null morph RNAi ). The concept of RNAi was originally discovered in frogs, where researchers were trying to determine if it was possible to knock out an mRNA without knocking out its corresponding gene. Their idea was to introduce antisense single stranded RNA so that it would, presumably, base pair with the sense message and prevent it from being translated. The concept didn’t work in frogs, but it did work in C. elegans. Researchers were amazed. However, the truth was far more complex and beautiful than they had anticipated. The nematode gene they had knocked out in this manner was called par-1. These are the experimental steps they followed: 1. Like any good scientists, they ran a control experiment with the sense single strand RNA rather than the antisense strand, which was supposed to be the agent of suppression. They observed that either strand was sufficient for suppression, and were dumbfounded. 3.8. TRANSIENT PHENOCOPIES 95 2. To make things even more confusing, in 1998-1999, researchers uncovered that the suppression effect was semi-heritable. 3. Furthermore, the suppression effect was observed to spread from cell to cell. 4. Finally, a definitive experiment proved that it was double stranded RNA that was accomplishing the par-1 suppression. They observed about a hundredfold increase in par-1 silencing among the dsRNA samples. Since the RNA samples were all prepared in vitro, they concluded that the “single stranded” RNA samples must have been contaminated with a tiny bit of dsRNA, which they deduced to be the real agent of suppression. 3.8.3 Mechanism An enzyme called Dicer cuts dsRNA into small 21-23b pieces, then presents them to machinery which somehow chops up nascent mRNA. Key concepts of this system were uncovered from simple genetics experiments. For example, one experiment had a promoter control GFP, which made the worm constitutively green. Performing a RNAi experiment against GFP resulted in dark worms. Then, a mutagenesis step restored the green phenotype. Researchers deduced that the silencing machinery had been mutated. It was found that the RNAi transcriptional silencing machinery is extremely conserved among metazoans. It had already been identified in plants as a weird phenomenon called quilling and cosuppression with trans genes. The silencing machinery of RNAi revolves around a RNA Induced Silencing Complex (RISC), to which the 21-23b dsRNA fragments generated by dicer are presented. One such fragment combines with a RISC to form a ssRNA/protein RISC, which is able to target mRNA via direct hybridization. It is interesting to note the specificity (21-23b) that has evolved naturally in this mechanism. In a perfect match of ssRNA to mRNA, RISC will cut the mRNA into pieces, terminating its viability as a message. In a slight mismatch of ssRNA to mRNA, the RISC will merely inhibit the message from being translated. The observed generational stability of this suppression is explained by RNA polymerase amplification of the initial dsRNA signal. 96 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Another component of the RNAi mechanism is a RNA Induced Transcriptional Silencing Complex (RITS), an epigenetic modifier of chromatin structure, which effectively silences transcription of genes whose dsRNA is present in the cell. Consider as an example the Lin4 miRNA, a Hairpin loop structure that gets cut up by dicer, presented to RISC, and then bound to the 30 UTR of some related genes Lin14 and Lin28 , which it downregulates. Production of this hairpin is accomplished by introducing a DNA that will be transcribed. The DNA sequence has sense and antisense complementary regions that can form the hairpin structure once it is translated into mRNA, which spontaneously forms dsRNA. 3.8.4 Limitations RNAi experiments are extremely useful, but also have some limitations: 1. Highly variable (will the siRNA get into the nucleus?) 2. Off-target effects (will the siRNA be specific to the gene I want to examine?) 3. Swamping the system (will too much siRNA be added?) 4. Hypomorphs but not null morphs (will partial loss-of-function be sufficient for our analysis?) In addition, delivery of siRNA is not easy in many organisms, but it is in nematode. It must be done 1. in vitro 2. Given genes for hairpin structure 3. Feed the nematode and it will go to any cell but the neuron 3.8.5 Speculation Kline’s idea was that RNAi is probably a viral defense mechanism. Systems are required for transposon stability. RNA is doing things normally for gene regulation in development. 3.9. SEX DETERMINATION 97 This entire system probably evolved as a runaway consequence of RNA pol being produced at some time. If RNA pol is making more messages in the cytoplasm, then it is plausible that to save energy, natural selection adopted the evolution of the RNAi machinery as a method of achieving an equilibrium. Rather than have all messages be degraded very quickly, why not have important messages persist in the cytoplasm for a while? Well, the reason why not is because then RNA pol starts making antisense copies (?) of these, which hybridize to the sense strand. With the presence of both copies of the message in the cytoplasm, dsRNA forms spontaneously. Perhaps this is just the natural cycle of RNA degradation, and bits of dsRNA that are chopped up by dicer have evolved the side effect of silencing the gene from which they were made. It makes sense that this response is seen, since dsRNA levels would mean high message levels, and no more need for more transcription. I need to look this stuff up and see if any of it has been proposed yet. 3.9 3.9.1 Sex Determination Introduction Sex Determination is the process by which an organism chooses to be male or female. Every organism has a slightly different mechanism of sex determination. There is no universality of sex determination, although there seems to be a universality of sex. Sex determination is unknown in Zebrafish, a fact that its investigators are trying to remedy. In Appendix C of our text, worm sex determination is not discussed [5]. In fact, nematodes are self-ferilizing hermaphrodites, but without males in the population, they would have no mechanism of transporting genes from one individual to another. 3.9.2 Evolution of Sex Of critical evolutionary significance is the 1:1 sex ratio that has evolved in nearly all populations of sexually dimorphic species. It is a fact that had been taken for granted for many years prior to Darwin, who was seemingly the first to acknowledge its significance in his chapter “Sexual Selection” in The Origin of Species [1]. 98 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Selection Natural Sexual Favors Selective Force Fittest The natural environment Sexiest The social environment Table 3.8: Contrasting natural selection and sexual selection Another critical observation is that sexual selection is usually contrary to natural selection (Table 3.8). Examples of Runaway Structures that have evolved as a result of sexual selection include deer antlers, peacock tails, and (it is hypothesized) human brains. Why was intelligence selected for in humans? It is not immediately obvious that natural selection would prefer intelligent beings that can create music and poetry, especially since there are so many nonintelligent ones that survive just fine. In addition, there are some massively destructive tendencies of humans, such as nuclear weapons, that are seemingly in stark contrast to natural selection. The theory is that evolution of the human brain has been driven by arbitrary female choice and so has escalated beyond what we might expect for simple natural selection. The presence of sex among species alive today is astounding. Indeed, sex is ubiquitous and has evolved at least 1 billion years ago. Evidence of this claim include a 425 million year old fossilized penis, and the observation that the genes for meiosis are among the most conserved. 3.9.3 The Effects of Sex It is best to define the sexes in terms of gametes. In Anisogamous species, it is easy to define sex since the usual eggs and sperm are produced. However, in Isogamous species where there is little to no dimorphism in sex cells, it is more difficult. Sex has some enormous associated costs: 1. Males dilute female contribution to the next generation. Since each parent contributes only 50% of its genes to the next generation, each individual needs to produce 2 offspring to break even. 2. Sex is dangerous (i.e. STDs, vulnerability) and requires a lot of energy (i.e. pollen) 3.9. SEX DETERMINATION 99 3. Sexual conflicts within a species. The Haig Hypothesis asserts that a male wants his offspring to get its resources from the female, and a female is unsure which male is best. 4. Sex breaks up winning gene combinations But sex also has many benefits: 1. Reduces the mutational load. When a gene is lost in an asexual population, those organisms can’t recover it (Muller’s ratchet). Therefore, there is a loss of genes without sex and recombination. An example of this is the human Y chromosome, which long ago became recombinationally isolated from the X. 2. Males are handy for getting rid of bad genes in the population. 3. Frees good mutations from bad backgrounds. 4. Makes new alleles combinations quickly. This benefits of this offset the drawbacks of breaking up winning gene combinations, because the ideal gene combination is constantly changing in the amorphous natural environment. An example of this is parasites, particularly human pathogens. Because the population is variable enough, no one parasite is able to kill everyone, such that even for HIV, about 10% of the population does not develop AIDS. Therefore, genes must determine the frequent 1:1 sex ratio that is found in most populations, and the sexual dimorphism that is present in most populations. 3.9.4 Environmental Sex Determination An interesting example is the marine worm Bonnellia viridis, which is one of the most sexually dimorphic species. Females of the species are about 100mm in length, whereas males are only 1mm in length, little more than packages of DNA. If an embryo of the species lands on a rock, it generates a female. However, if an embryo of the species lands on a female, it generates a male. Strange, but even stranger is that the sex ratio is still probably 1:1. The preceding example is an organism that uses Environmental Sex Determination. Other examples are turtles and alligators that determine sex based on the temperature of the egg, and tropical fish that remain females as long as there is a dominant male in the school. 100 3.9.5 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Genotypic Sex Determination This contrasts Genotypic Sex Determination, in which sexual differentiation is caused by the segregation of alleles, genes, or chromosomes. Both of these types of sex determination contrast Aristotle’s version of the theory, which asserted that the sex of the offspring are determined by the heat of the act. The more heated, the more likely it was to be male. However, this assertion is inconsistent with the observation of the 1:1 sex ratio, which we know was observed even in Aristotle’s time since records of the census persist. Again, humans knew about the 1:1 sex ratio but did not realize its significance until Darwin. But still, why is there a 1:1 sex ratio if males have so much extra reproductive capacity? The answer is, only a minority of males reproduce. For example, Ghengis Khan is the direct ancestor of ≈ 0.5% of all people alive now. Darwin claimed that the 2 sexes contribute equally to the next generation. This has evolved because the minority sex always contributes slightly more to the next generation. For example, in a population that had more males than females, a preference to give birth to a female in the next generation would give those genes an advantage in that next generation. Fisher examined the skew of the 1:1 distribution in strange organisms. An interesting consequence is that there are slightly more males at birth than females. The reason for this is so there will be a precise 1:1 ratio at reproductive age. Males are more vulnerable, since they have only one X chromosome, so they die early to produce the 1:1 ratio at reproductive age. 3.9.6 Mechanisms of GSD Motivated by the deduction of a triploid mother as a result of seeing an intersex progeny fly, sex determination in flies was found to be a function of the Sex to Autosome Ratio (X:A). Triploid XXX:AAA flies are female, but diploid XX:AAA flies are intersex. These individuals are Phenotypic Mosaics. Thus, in many species, this X:A ratio determines sex and affects the choice to develop into one sex or the other. Yet, the genetic material is the same, so how is this done? An interesting experiment that sheds some light on the situation is the production of genotypic sexual mosaics. A half XX, half XO fly develops into a half female, half male gynandromorph. Yet, a half 3.9. SEX DETERMINATION 101 haploid X, half diploid XX fly fully develops into a female. This is because sex is determined by the X:A ratio. Another example of this method of sex determination is in C. elegans, where the number of X chromosomes determines hermaproditic or male development. There is a 1:1 sex ratio of hermaphrodites to males, but in a population of only hermaphrodites, males will arise at a low rate due to nondisjunction events in hermaprodite self-crosses. Again, the ratio seems to determine sex. Males are produced with an XX:AAA ratio of 2/3 = 0.67, whereas females are produced with an XXX:AAAA ratio of 3/4 = 0.75. However, it must be noted that these ratio methods of determining sex are certainly the minority. Humans are an example of a more universal method used to determine sex: the Dominant Masculinizer, which in humans is the SRY gene on the Y chromosome. The Y chromosome was discovered in 1929, and in 1959, aneuploid humans were discovered. Kleinfelter’s syndrome patients, sterile males, were found to be XXY, and Turner’s syndrome patients, sterile females that mostly abort, were found to be XO. An interesting example of a dominant masculinizer is the autosomal M gene in the house fly. Males develop from M/m genotypes and females develop from m/m genotypes. This can be explained by noticing that Muller’s ratchet is probably at work here, but has not gone so far as to produce dimorphic sex chromosomes that are recombinationally isolated yet. Another interesting example are honeybees, which have strange sex determination methods. Male drones develop from unfertilized haploid eggs, and fertilized eggs turn into diploids that can either become fertile females (queens) or sterile females (workers). When forced to, a queen will mate with her sons, which we know leads to increased homozygosity, and we observe that it sometimes produces a diploid male. Therefore, we deduce that sex detemination is controlled in honeybees based on if the individual is heterozygous (female) or homo(hemi)zygous (male). Therefore, this is just an obscure method of genetic sex determination. Strangely, a phenomenon called Maternal Effect GSD also produces the 1:1 sex ratio. In this mechanism, F/f mothers produce other females, and f /f females produce males. Since all males are f /f , we have that: P F/f ~ × f /f | P f /f ~ × f /f | : : 1 F/f ~ 1 f /f ~ 2 f /f | F1 F1 Why is there so much variation among sexual differentiation methods? 102 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES One clue comes from some arthropods, which have sexual life cycles that can be disturbed by a parasite. That bacteria infects the arthropod, and perverts the sex ratio to favor females in the population since the bacteria can only survive in the cytoplasm. The answer probably is that sex has been reinvented over the millenia to confuse parasites such as this. It has been demonstrated that reinvention is quite easy in nematode and can be done with only 2 mutations. 3.10 Dosage Compensation 3.10.1 The Lion Hypothesis Dosage Compensation, the phenomena accomplished in most species by X Inactivation, is the phenomena where all the genes on one of the female’s X chromosomes are transcriptionally inactivated and all genes on the other X chromosome are upregulated. Why aren’t all X-linked genes dominant? It might seem that this would be a logical solution to complement X-inactivation, since then no harmful recessive genes would be exposed after X-inactivation. However, this can be explained by invoking non-autonomity. Natural selection in the body selects wild-type cells and the body has considerable ability to compensate for a loss of cells, so if there are any recessive lethal mutations on one of the X chromosomes, only cells which inactivate that chromosome will survive. The Lion Hypothesis is the articulation of the theory that one X is always inactivated. This can be demonstrated by putting an autosomal gene on an X chromosome, then observing its inactivity in 50% of cells produced. The reciprocal experiment can be performed by putting an X-linked gene onto an autosome, then observing the result that it is always active. 3.10.2 Defining the X Chromosome The X Inactivation Center (Xic) is the genetic element on the X chromosome responsible for defining it as a target for the X-inactivation machinery. Searl’s Translocation between X and 16 in mouse has been used to demonstrate that as long as the normal X is inactivated, the dosage remains fine. If the translocated X chromosome, which includes the Xic but some elements from 16 substituted for X elements, becomes inactivated, then dosage 3.10. DOSAGE COMPENSATION 103 becomes unbalanced since there are X chromosomal elements that were not inactivated on chromosome 16. The point is that early in embryonic development, there is a 1:1 ratio of cells with translocated X inactivated to cells with normal X inactivated. But, since translocated X inactivation is unstable, the organism selects cells with normal X inactivation, which is what is principally seen in the developed organism. X-inactivation can also be used as a genetic tool. By putting a gene on the X chromosome, you know it will be inactivated 50% of the time, so you can study its null morph phenotype if it is a cell autonomous mutation. 3.10.3 Noncoding RNA Other genetic elements involved in X-inactivation are the X controlling element (Xce), of unknown function to me at this time, and the X Inactive Specific Transcripts (Xist), which encodes a noncoding RNA that coats the inactive X chromosome only in cis. How is this done? First, it was demonstrated that this functionality is only in cis by knocking out one X chromosome’s Xist promoter, which induced the other X to be the one that always inactivates. Additionally, sufficiency was shown by putting Xist on an autosome, which will inactivate that autosome if early enough in development. Therefore, Xist is involved only in the establishment of the inactivation phenotype. In fly, dosage compensation is achieved by the msl gene and the rox1,2 genes. Knocking out both rox genes induces loss of dosage compensation. This illustrates the biological theme of regulatory complexes with noncoding RNAs. 3.10.4 Exceptions Embryonic stem cells are totipotent cells that are good for studying dosage compensation. It should be noted that not all genes on the X chromosome are inactivated. For example, in humans, 10% of genes are not inactivated. Consider two genes a, which exhibits dosage compensation, and b, which does not, because there is a copy on the Y chromosome (and is not inactivated). Then, normal dosage will be as in Table 3.9. What about more than one active X chromosome? Experiments have shown that about half of X chromosomes inactivate (Table 3.10). 104 CHAPTER 3. ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Female Dosage compensation Xa/Xa No dosage compensation Xb/Xb Male XaYXbYb Table 3.9: Normal dosage for X-linked genes a and b. Gene a must have haploid dosage, so one X is inactivated to compensate. Gene b must have diplod dosage, so it is on a region of the X which is not inactivated, and it is on the Y chromosome. Genotype X-inactivations XY AA 0 XX AA 1 XXY AAA 1 XXX AAA 1 or 2 XXXX AAAA 2 Table 3.10: Number of X-inactivations for various normal and aneuploid genotypes, determined experimentally. Also, take care to differentiate SRY from dosage compensation. Bibliography [1] Charles Darwin. The Origin of Species. Penguin Classics, New York, 1859. [2] T. Duster. Race and reification in science. Science, 307(5712):1050–1, 2005. [3] B Ephrussi et al. Malignancy of somatic cell hybrids. 224(226):1314–6, 1969. Nature, [4] Leland H. Hartwell, Joseph Culotti, and Brian Reid. Genetic Control of the Cell-Division Cycle in Yeast, I. Detection of Mutants. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 66(2):352–9, 1970. [5] Leland H. Hartwell et al. Genetics: from Genes to Genomes. McGrawHill, 2000. [6] VM Ingram. A specific chemical difference between the globins of normal human and sickle-cell anaemia haemoglobin. Nature, 178(4537):792–4, 1956. [7] Lynn B. Jorde and Stephen P. Wooding. Genetic variation, classification, and ‘race’. Nature Genetics, 36(11):S28–S33, 2004. [8] AG Knudson. Mutation and cancer: a statistical study of retinoblastoma. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 68:820–823, 1971. [9] Richard Lewontin. Human diversity. Scientific American Library, New York, 1995. 105 106 BIBLIOGRAPHY Appendix A Glossary Acentric Chromosome without a centromere, 42 Acrocentric Chromosome with a very short p arm, 44 Acute Macular Degeneration Genetic disease manifest in old age which causes partial blindness and inability to focus on objects, 64 Aflatoxin Carcinogen found in moldy peas and binds to liver cell DNA, 62 Alkaptonuria Monogenic human disease named after the black urine which is its primary symptom, 56 Allele An instance of a gene; each gene has many associated alleles, 12 Amorphic Mutant alleles where increased dosage has no effect on phenotype, such as the white eye mutant in fly, 81 Anaphase The third phase of cell division in which chromosomes are pulled to opposite poles of the cell, 10 Anisogamous Sexual class in which sex cells are dimorphic, 98 Antimorphic Gain-of-function alleles that suppress normal function, 82 Autosome A chromosome that do not influence sex determination, 9 Bacterial Artificial Chromosome Bacterial chromosome with a large DNA insert, which is usually of interest to sequence or map, 54 107 108 APPENDIX A. GLOSSARY Bacteriophage Virus that infects bacterial hosts to replicate, 70 Balancer Genetically useful, artificially constructed chromosome that has a dominant lethal mutation, a recessive lethal mutation, and multiple inversions that results in very little crossing-over, 42 Burkitt’s Lymphoma Cancer of white blood cells initiated by a translocation and consequent upregulation of Myc, a cell division signal, 61 Cell Autonomous Mutation class in which only one cell of an organism needs to be mutant for the mutant phenotype to appear, 92 Chimera Organism created from multiple zygotes, 92 Chromatid One of the two segments of DNA joined by a centromere near the center of the replicated chromosome, 10 Chromatin The complex of DNA and protein that comprises the nuclear genetic material, 9 Chromosome Linear array of genes and noncoding regions, 9 Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia , 62 Cistrons The old word for “gene”, 79 Coefficient of coincidence Quantity used to gauge interference; defined as nObserved Doubles /nExpected Doubles , 26 Complementation group Group of mutations that identify the same gene and fail to complement one another, 35 Complementation test For two genetic mutants, a test that reveals if they share the same genetic locus, 35 Conditional Type of mutation (very useful for geneticists) that doesn’t affect all progeny all the time, 85 Conjugation Process of bacterial DNA exchange, first discovered by Lederberg, 71 Cross Cytological structure microscopically visible which indicates formation of translocated chromosomes, 43 109 Deletion loop Structure formed pairing, 40 Ω in deletion mutants that optimizes base Dicentric Chromosome with two centromeres, 42 Dicer Nucleic acid cutter which slices big dsRNA molecules into small 2123b pieces that can be presented to RISC in the mechanism of RNAi , 95 Dominant Masculinizer Genetic element of the Y chromosome (often SRY) that induces male development, 101 Dominant Allele which effectively silences a relatively recessive allele; dominance ensures expression of the allele in phenotype, 12 Dosage Compensation Inactivation of X chromosome in females and consequent overproduction of transcripts in active chromosome, 102 Ectopic Gene expression at the wrong time, in the wrong place, or in the wrong sex, 84 Environmental Sex Determination Method of sexual differentiation that is induced by host, temperature, neighbor density, presence of males, or some other non-genetic factor, 99 FLP/FRT Mitotic recombination system that can be used transgenically in fly; FLP is a recombinase and FRT is the DNA sequence it recognizes, 92 Gene Ontology Database which attempts to characterize function, location of expression, etc. of every gene, 55 Gene conversion Unidirectional transfer of genetic information which can sometimes be provoked by heteroduplex DNA, 31 Gene The unit of inheritance; physically manifested by DNA in chromosomes, 12 Genetic Mosaic An organism useful for genetics experiments in which each cell does not contain the same genetic material, 91 110 APPENDIX A. GLOSSARY Genotype A description of the inherited genetic content; usually written as the alleles present in the individual, 12 Genotypic Sex Determination Method of sexual differentiation that produces the 1:1 ratio and is induced by segregation of alleles, genes, or chromosomes, 100 Gynandromorph Half male, half female organism that was first publicized in 1914, 92 Gynogenetic diploid Genetically useful individual in which all of the DNA comes from the mother; created by fusing a normal egg with an irradiated sperm and applying pressure (Zebrafish) or colchisine (plants), 37 Gypsy Enhancer Boundary Protein that binds to certain DNA elements in fly that can prevent enhancer activation when the hairy wing suppressor protein binds, 87 Haig Hypothesis Essentially the principle of sexual selfishness as an evolutionary driving force, 99 Hairpin Substrate (miRNA) of RNAi machinery that binds to UTRs and silences transcription, 96 Haploinsufficiency Not being able to sustain normal phenotype with only one functional allele, 19 Haplotype Large portion of chromosome which is inherited together, 64 Hemizygote In males, the condition of a phenotype being determined by a single X-linked allele, 16 Heteroduplex DNA in which the two strands of the helix consist of different, but homologous, sequences, 31 Heteroplasmic Cytoplasmically varied; refers to the many genetic varieties of the same type of organelle present in a cell, 47 Heterozygous Individual with two different alleles, 13 111 High Multiplicity of Infection Experiment to establish complementation in which many copies of two viral strains are introduced to a nonpermissive host, 77 Holliday model Theory of crossing-over that postulates formation of a specific structure that results from a single strand nick, 32 Homologous Chromosomes Chromosomes that match in size, shape, and order of genes, 9 Homoplasmic Cytoplasmically uniform; all the organelles of a given type in one cell are genetically uniform, 47 Homozygous Individual with two of the same alleles, 13 Hypermorphic Gain-of-function alleles, 82 Hypomorphic Partial loss-of-function alleles, 81 Interference The phenomenon of single crossover events somehow inhibiting double crossover events; quantified via 1−Kc = 1−nObserved Doubles /nExpected Doubles , 26 Interphase The phase of the cell cycle between mitosis events. It consists of the phases G1, S, and G2., 9 Ionizing Radiation Comes from X, γ, or cosmic rays and usually ends up causing a ds-break, 90 Isogamous Sexual class in which sex cells are the same, 98 Law of Independent Assortment Pairs of alleles separate at meiosis and join at fertilization independent of other pairs of alleles, 13 Law of Segregation The two alleles present for each gene separate during meiosis and unite randomly with an allele from another gamete at fertilization, 12 Linked Genes which do not assort independently of one another; marked by observed recombination frequency of less than 1/2, 21 Lion Hypothesis Theory that one X is always inactivated, 102 112 APPENDIX A. GLOSSARY Maternal Effect Lethality Recessive mutation that is manifest in breeding behavior if mother is homozygous: progeny are mostly dead and sometimes rescuable, 93 Maternal Effect Method of GSD in which the mother’s genotype influences sexual development, 101 Meiosis The process of segregating alleles into gametes, 9 Metaphase The second phase of cell division which is marked by chromosomal alignment on the “metaphase plate.”, 10 Minute Cell autonomous lethal mutation which can be used to slow development; when used on a wild-type chromosome in mitotic recombination, the homozygous minute cells fail to grow, 93 Mitosis The process of chromosome separation in somatic cells that produces two identical daughter cells, 9 Mitotic Recombination Crossing-over during mitosis, which can be induced by x-rays and is manifest in a twin spot, 92 Mutator Mutation class which increases the rate of mutation, 89 NPD Non-parental ditype; marked by recombinant progeny, and consequently indicates separation of parental chromosomes during meiosis I, 28 Neomorphic Gain-of-function alleles that cause novelty, 84 Non-Homologous End Joining Repair mechanism invoked after a double strand break, an event that usually occurs from ionizing radiation, 90 Nondisjunction Nonstandard chromosomal segregation during meiosis I which results in aneuploid progeny, 17 Nonionizing Radiation Comes from UV light and damages DNA by making thymidine dimers, 89 Norm of Reaction , 68 Octad The four pairs of identical spores that result from meiosis in Neurospora; useful for quantifying centromere map distance, 30 113 Oncogene Gain-of-function gene usually involved in cell growth which will induce cancer with only one allele, 60 Oncogene Mutant genes which act dominantly to cause cancer, 61 P-Elements Genetic elements that are permissive to transposition, 91 PD Parental ditype; indicates no recombination, 28 Paracentric inversion Inversion event where the centromere is not involved in the loop structure that forms; the two chromosomes generated from crossing-over will be dicentric and acentric, 42 Pericentric inversion Inversion event where the centromere is involved in the loop structure that forms; chromosomes generated from crossingover will result in chromatids with centromeres attached, 41 Phenotype The morphological, physiological, or biochemical manifestation of an inherited characteristic that is observable to the geneticist, 12 Phenotypic Mosaic Individuals that do no appear uniform (i.e. gynandromorphs, intersex), 100 Plaque Morphological feature of T4 bacteriophage that is genetically determined and can be mapped with very high resolution, 77 Pleiotropic Gene whose product contributes to more than one phenotype, 15 Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Class of compounds in cigarette smoke that binds to DNA in lung epithelial tissue, 62 Prophase The intial phase of cell division which is marked by chromosome condensation and nuclear envelope breakdown, 10 Proto-Oncogene Class of genes which when mutated may lead to cancer, 61 Pseudoallele , 76 Pseudodominance Expression of a recessive allele caused by deletion in the homologous chromosome, 39 114 APPENDIX A. GLOSSARY Punnett square A genetics problem solving device constructed by first drawing a table with haploid gamete genotypes on the periphery and then writing the genotypes of progeny that would result from the meeting of these games in the center, 13 RNA Induced Silencing Complex (RISC) Machinery of RNAi into which siRNA is incorporated then used to silence a corresponding mRNA, 95 RNA Induced Transcriptional Silencing Complex (RITS) Epigenetic modifier of chromatin structure in RNAi , which effectively silences transcription of genes whose dsRNA is present in the cell, 96 RNA Interference (RNAi ) Complex method of epigenetic silencing regulated by double stranded RNA, 94 Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Growth factor receptors that are often protooncogenes, 61 Recessive lethality A fatal condition that causes developmental death in utero only when two recessive alleles are inherited; usually deduced from a 2:1 F2 ratio, 15 Recessive Allele which is effectively silenced by a relatively dominant allele; recessive alleles are expressed only when they are the only alleles present, 12 Recombinant Progeny with genotypes unlike those of parents, 22 Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Genetic marker resulting from a mutated restriction site, 53 Retinoblastoma First cancer whose inheritance was accurately modeled, by the two-hit model, 58 Reverting the Dominance Technique of showing the validity of the assertion that wild-type phenotype is restored in the cis-trans test because two mutations are in the same gene, 78 Runaway Structure An organ with seemingly no natural benefit that have become very large or pronounced, presumably at equilibrium between natural selection, which disfavors, and sexual selection, which arbitrarily favors, 98 115 Searl’s Translocation Demonstration of necessity of X-inactivation by swapping non-Xic genetic elements in X and 16 in mouse, 102 Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Genetic disease which renders the immune system useless, 58 Sex Chromosome A chromosome involved in sex determination, 10 Sex Determination The molecular mechanism by which an organism becomes sexually differentiated, 97 Sex Lethal Fly gene locus where loss-of-function phenotype is male normal female lethal, and gain-of-function phenotype is male lethal and female rescued, 81 Sex to Autosome Ratio (X:A) Determines sex in fly, 100 Sexual Selection The mechanism of evolutionary change by which arbitrarily chosen sexy characters in males are selected by females; often used to explain the evolution of runaway structures such as the peacock’s tail or the human brain, 97 Shotgun Sequencing Method of genome construction in which the genome is haphazardly shred, sequenced, then pieced back together automatically with computer alignment programs, 55 Sickle Cell Anemia Monogenic human disease named after the misshapen red blood cells characteristic of affected individuals, whose primary symptom is widespread pain, 56 Simple Sequence Length Polymorphisms Genetic marker characterized by unique flanking sequences and a variable number of repetitions of a two or three nucleotide sequence, 54 Sister Chromatids Identical DNA segments connected at a centromere that exist only after DNA replication in S phase and before cell division in mitosis, 10 Small Interfering RNA (siRNA) Double stranded RNA cut up (21-23b) copy of a gene to be silenced in RNAi experiments, 94 116 APPENDIX A. GLOSSARY T Tetratype; indicates crossing-over between replicated chromosomes during metaphase I, 28 Telophase The last stage of cell division before cytokinesis; it is marked by reformation of the nuclear envelope, 10 Temperature Sensitive Mutation class in which the protein product is active at one range of temperatures and inactive at another, facilitating developmental genetics experiments, 87 Test Cross Genetic cross, used to deduce the genotype of an individual with dominant phenotype, in which the individual of unknown genotype is crossed with a recessive homozygote, 13 Tetrad (cytology) The structure of synapsed chromosomes that forms during metaphase, 10 Tetrad Unit of progeny is many yeast strains, including S. cerevisiae, and, functionally, Neurospora, 27 Translocation Event in which part of a chromosome is traded with, or given to, a non-homologous chromosome, 43 Transposon Mobile genetic elements, first identified in Drosophila, that naturally encode a transposase but can be used as transgenes, 90 Tumor Suppressor Loss-of-function gene usually involved in homeostasis which will induce cancer only with two mutant alleles, 60 Tumor Suppressor Proteins which act dominantly to suppress tumors, 62 Twin Spot Manifestation of mitotic recombination in fly that is made available because homologous chromosomes are close to each other in interphase, 92 X Inactivation Center (Xic) Genetic element on X chromosome which defines it as a target for inactivation, 102 X Inactivation Transcriptional silencing of all genes on one X chromosome, 102 X Inactive Specific Transcripts (Xist) Gene which encodes a noncoding RNA that coats the inactive X chromosome only in cis, 103 Index Acentric, 42 Acrocentric, 44 Acute Macular Degeneration, 64 Aflatoxin, 62 Alkaptonuria, 56 Allele, 12 Amorphic, 81 Anaphase, 10 Anisogamous, 98 Antimorphic, 82 Aristotle, 100 Autosome, 9 Cross, 43 daughterless, 86 Deletion loop, 40 Dicentric, 42 Dicer, 95 Dominant, 12 Dominant Masculinizer, 101 Dosage Compensation, 102 double strand break, 90 Ectopic, 84 Embryonic stem cells, 103 Environmental Sex Determination, 99 Bacterial Artificial Chromosome, 54 Bacteriophage, 70 Balancer, 42 Burkitt’s Lymphoma, 61 Fisher, 100 FLP/FRT, 92 Cell Autonomous, 92 Chimera, 92 Chromatid, 10 Chromatin, 9 Chromosome, 9 Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia, 62 Cistrons, 79 Coefficient of coincidence, 26 Complementation group, 35 Complementation test, 35 complementation test, 76, 78 Conditional, 85 Conjugation, 71 Gene, 12 Gene conversion, 31 Gene Ontology, 55 Genetic Mosaic, 91 Genotype, 12 Genotypic Sex Determination, 100 Ghengis Khan, 100 Gynandromorph, 92 gynandromorph, 100 Gynogenetic diploid, 37 Gypsy Enhancer Boundary, 87 Haig Hypothesis, 99 117 118 Hairpin, 96 hairy wing, 87 Haploinsufficiency, 19 Haplotype, 64 Hemizygote, 16 Heteroduplex, 31 Heteroplasmic, 47 Heterozygous, 13 High Multiplicity of Infection, 77 Holliday model, 32 Homologous Chromosomes, 9 Homoplasmic, 47 Homozygous, 13 Hypermorphic, 82 Hypomorphic, 81 Interference, 26 Interphase, 9 Ionizing Radiation, 90 Isogamous, 98 Kleinfelter’s syndrome, 101 Law of Independent Assortment, 13 Law of Segregation, 12 Linked, 21 Lion Hypothesis, 102 Maternal Effect, 101 Maternal Effect Lethality, 93 Meiosis, 9 Metaphase, 10 Minute, 93 Mitosis, 9 Mitotic Recombination, 92 Muller’s ratchet, 99, 101 Mutator, 89 natural selection, 89 INDEX Neomorphic, 84 Non-Homologous End Joining, 90 Nondisjunction, 17 Nonionizing Radiation, 89 Norm of Reaction, 68 NPD, 28 Octad, 30 Oncogene, 60, 61 oogenesis, 82 P-Elements, 91 Paracentric inversion, 42 PD, 28 Pericentric inversion, 41 Phenotype, 12 Phenotypic Mosaic, 100 Plaque, 77 Pleiotropic, 15 pleiotropic, 91 Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, 62 Prophase, 10 Proto-Oncogene, 61 Pseudoallele, 76 Pseudodominance, 39 Punnett square, 13 quilling, 95 Receptor Tyrosine Kinase, 61 Recessive, 12 Recessive lethality, 15 Recombinant, 22 Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism, 53 Retinoblastoma, 58 Reverting the Dominance, 78 INDEX RNA Induced Silencing Complex (RISC), 95 RNA Induced Transcriptional Silencing Complex (RITS), 96 RNA Interference (RNAi ), 94 RNA polymerase, 95 Runaway Structure, 98 Searl’s Translocation, 102 Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, 58 Sex Chromosome, 10 Sex Determination, 97 Sex Lethal, 81 Sex to Autosome Ratio (X:A), 100 Sexual Selection, 97 Shotgun Sequencing, 55 Sickle Cell Anemia, 56 Simple Sequence Length Polymorphisms, 54 Sister Chromatids, 10 Small Interfering RNA (siRNA), 94 SRY, 101 STD, 98 T, 28 Telophase, 10 Temperature Sensitive, 87 Test Cross, 13 Tetrad, 10, 27 The Origin of Species, 97 Translocation, 43 Transposon, 90 Tumor Suppressor, 60, 62 Turner’s syndrome, 101 Twin Spot, 92 Vulval Precursor, 82 119 X controlling element, 103 X Inactivation, 102 X Inactivation Center (Xic), 102 X Inactive Specific Transcripts (Xist), 103