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CONCEPTS OF TIC Fifth Edition WILLIAM S. KLUG The College ofNew Jersey p H- ^ MICHAEL R. CUMMINGS % University ofIllinois, Chicago \, ' ' -x "• ' t. contributed by _^^ w --fl|JplOtwell Slippery Rock University Spencer University of Alberta, Edmonton Fechnlsche Un|Versft#t FACHBEREICH I O A B I O L O G I E ' — Blbllbtlejc — Schnittspahnstrafte 10 O-«4287 D a r m t t a d t PRENTICE'HArr'Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 B R I N T N T An Introduction to Genetics, 1 PART ONE HEREDITY AND THE PHENOTYPE, 17 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 PART TWO 10 n 12 13 14 15 16 17 Cell Division and Chromosomes, 18 Mendelian Genetics, 50 Modification of Mendelian Ratios, 79 Linkage, Crossing Over, and Chromosome Mapping, 115 Recombination and Mapping in Bacteria and Bacteriophages, 149 Extensions of Genetic Analysis, 180 Extranuclear Inheritance, 208 Chromosome Variation and Sex Determination, 221 MOLECULAR BASIS OF HEREDITY, 261 Structure and Analysis of DNA and RNA, 262 DNA Replication and Recombination, 298 Storage and Expression of Genetic Information, 324 Proteins: The End Product of Genetic Expression, 364 Gene Mutation, DNA Repair, and Transposable Elements, 389 Recombinant DNA Technology, 428 Applications of Recombinant DNA Technology, 461 Genomic Organization of DNA, 490 PART THREE ADVANCED TOPICS IN GENETIC ANALYSIS, 521 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 APPENDIX A: APPENDIX B: APPENDIX C: CREDITS INDEX Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Phages, 522 Regulation of Gene Expression in Eukaryotes, 544 Developmental Genetics, 567 Genetics and Cancer, 591 Genetic Basis of the Immune Response, 614 The Genetics of Behavior, 637 Population Genetics, 659 Genetics and Evolution, 681 Experimental Methods A-1 Glossary B-l Solutions to Selected Even-Numbered Problems and Discussion Questions C-l CR-1 1-1 N 1 An Introduction to Genetics, 1 The Historical Context of Genetics 2 Prehistoric Domestication of Animals and Cultivation of Plants 2 The Greek Influence: Hippocrates and Aristotle 2 The Dawn of Modern Biology: 1600-1850 3 Darwin: The Gap in His Theory of Evolution 4 Mendel: An Experimental Biologist 5 Basic Concepts of Genetics 6 Investigative Approaches in Genetics 9 Genetics and Society 10 y Eugenics: The Misguided Application of Science 10 Soviet Science: The Lysenko Affair 11 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY A New Era in Plant Genetics: The Flavr Saw Tomato and Edible Vaccines 12 N Prometaphase and Metaphase 27 Anaphase 27 Telophase 29 Genetic Regulation of the Cell Cycle 30 Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction 31 An Overview of Meiosis 32 The First Meiotic Division: Prophase 132 Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase 133 Spermatogenesis and Oogenesis 36 The Significance of Meiosis 36 The Cytological Origin of the Mitotic and Meiotic Chromosome 39 The Synaptonemal Complex 40 Specialized Chromosomes 42 Polytene Chromosomes 42 Lampbrush Chromosomes 43 Genetic Advances in Agriculture and Medicine 12 Mendelian Genetics 50 PART ONE HEREDITY AND THE PHENOTYPE 17 2 Cell Division and Chromosomes 18 Cell Structure 19 Cell Boundaries 19 The Nucleus 20 The Cytoplasm and Organelles 21 Homologous Chromosomes, Haploidy, and Diploidy 22 Mitosis and Cell Division 2 5 Interphase and the Cell Cycle 25 Prophase 26 Gregorjohann Mendel 51 Mendel's Experimental Approach 51 The Monohybrid Cross 51 Mendel's First Three Postulates 53 Modern Genetic Terminology 54 Mendel's Analytical Approach 55 Punnett Squares 55 The Test Cross: One Character 55 The Dihybrid Cross 56 Mendel's Fourth Postulate: Independent Assortment 56 The Test Cross: Two Characters 57 The Trihybrid Cross 59 The Forked-Line Method, or Branch Diagram 59 The Rediscovery of Mendel's Work 61 The Rebirth of Mendelian Genetics 61 Unit Factors, Genes, and Homologous Chromosomes 62 Independent Assortment and Genetic Variation 63 Probability and Genetic Events 63 The Product Law and Sum Law 63 Conditional Probability 64 The Binomial Theorem 65 Evaluating Genetic Data: Chi-Square Analysis 66 Human Pedigrees 69 Xlll XIV CONTENTS 4 Modification of Mendelian Ratios 79 Potential Function of an Allele 80 Symbols for Alleles 80 Incomplete, or Partial, Dominance 81 Codominance 82 Multiple Alleles 83 The ABO Blood Groups 83 The A and B Antigens 83 The Bombay Phenotype 85 The Secretor Locus 85 The Rh Antigens 85 The white Locus in Drosophila 86 Lethal Alleles 86 Combinations of Two Gene Pairs 88 Gene Interaction: Discontinuous Variation 89 Epistasis 89 Novel Phenotypes 93 Other Modified Dihybrid Ratios 95 Gene Interaction: Continuous Variation 95 Quantitative Inheritance: Polygenes 95 Calculating the Number of Polygenes 99 The Significance of Polygenic Control 100 Genes on the X Chromosome: X-Linkage 100 X-Linkage in Drosophila 100 X-Linkage in Humans 102 Sex-Limited and Sex-Influenced Inheritance 103 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY The Uncertain Genetic Fate of Purebred Dogs 104 5 Linkage, Crossing Over, and Chromosome Mapping 115 Linkage versus Independent Assortment 116 The Linkage Ratio 116 Incomplete Linkage, Crossing Over, and Chromosome Mapping 118 Morgan and Crossing Over 119 Sturtevant and Mapping 119 Single Crossovers 121 Multiple Crossovers 121 Three-Point Mapping in Drosophila 122 Determining the Gene Sequence 124 A Mapping Problem in Maize 126 Interference and the Coefficient of Coincidence 129 The Inaccuracy of Mapping Experiments 130 The Genetic Map of Drosophila 131 Other Aspects of Genetic Exchange 131 Crossing Over in the Four-Strand Stage 132 Cytological Evidence for Crossing Over 134 The Mechanism of Crossing Over 135 Mitotic Recombination 136 Sister Chromatid Exchanges 137 Somatic Cell Hybridization and Human Chromosome Maps 138 Did Mendel Encounter Linkage? 140 Why Didn 't Gregor Mendel Find Linkage? 141 6 Recombination and Mapping in Bacteria and Bacteriophages 149 Bacterial Mutation and Growth 150 Genetic Recombination in Bacteria: Conjugation 151 F + and F~ Bacteria 152 Hfr Bacteria and Chromosome Mapping 154 Recombination in F + X F~ Matings: A Reexamination 156 The F' State and Merozygotes 157 The Rec Proteins and Bacterial Recombination 158 Plasmids 158 Bacterial Transformation 160 Transformation and Mapping 161 The Genetic Study of Bacteriophages 162 Phage T4 Infection and Reproduction 162 The Plaque Assay 164 Lysis and Lysogeny 165 Transduction: Virus-Mediated Bacterial DNA Transfer 165 The Lederberg-Zinder Experiment 165 The Nature of Transduction 166 y Mapping and Specialized Transduction 167 Mutation and Recombination in Viruses 168 Genetic Exchange between Bacterial Viruses 168 Intragenic Recombination in Phage T 4 169 The rll Locus of Phage T4 170 Complementation by rll Mutations 170 Recombinational Analysis 172 Deletion Testing of the rll Locus 172 The rll Gene Map 174 7 Extensions of Genetic Analysis 180 Phenotypic Expression 181 Penetrance and Expressivity 181 CONTENTS Genetic Background: Suppression and Position Effects 182 Temperature Effects 182 Nutritional Effects 183 Onset of Genetic Expression 184 Genetic Anticipation 184 Genomic (Parental) Imprinting 185 Continuous Variation and Polygenes 186 Continuous versus Discontinuous Variation 186 Mapping Quantitative Trait Loci 187 Analysis of Polygenic Traits 188 The Mean 189 Variance 189 Standard Deviation 190 Standard Error of the Mean 190 Analysis of a Quantitative Character 190 Heritability 192 Broad-Sense Heritability 192 Narrow-Sense Heritability 192 Artificial Selection 193 Twin Studies in Humans 193 The Use of Haploid Organisms in Linkage and Mapping Studies 194 Gene-to-Centromere Mapping 195 Ordered versus Unordered Tetrad Analysis 196 Linkage and Gene Mapping in Haploid Organisms 197 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY Preserving Plant Germplasm: The Key to the Future ofAgriculture 200 8 Extranuclear Inheritance 208 Maternal Effect 209 Ephestia Pigmentation 209 Limnaea Coiling 209 Embryonic Development in Drosophila 210 Organelle Heredity 211 Chloroplasts: Variegation in Four O'Clock Plants 211 Iojap in Maize 211 Chlamydomonas Mutations 212 Mitochondria: poky in Neurospora 213 Petite in Saccharomyces 213 Mitochondrial DNA and Human Diseases 214 Infectious Heredity 216 Kappa in Paramecium 216 Infective Particles in Drosophila 217 XV 9 Chromosome Variation and Sex Determination 221 Variation in Chromosome Number: An Overview 222 The Diploid Chromosome Number in Humans 222 Chromosomes, Sex Differentiation, and Sex Determination in Humans, 222 Klinefelter and Turner Syndromes 223 47,XXX Syndrome 223 47,XYY Condition 223 Sexual Differentiation in Humans 225 The Y Chromosome and Male Development 226 Sex Ratio in Humans 226 Dosage Compensation in Humans 227 Barr Bodies 227 The Lyon Hypothesis 228 The Mechanism of Inactivation 229 Chromosome Composition and Sex Determination in Drosophila 230 Dosage Compensation in Drosophila 232 Drosophila Mosaics 233 Aneuploidy 234 Monosomy 234 Partial Monosomy: Cri-du-Chat Syndrome 234 Trisomy 235 Down Syndrome 236 Patau Syndrome 237 Edwards Syndrome 237 Viability in Human Aneuploidy 238 Polyploidy and Its Origins 238 Autopolyploidy 239 Allopolyploidy 240 y Endopolyploidy 242 ~ Variation in Chromosome Structure and Arrangement: An Overview 243 Deletions 243 Duplications 244 Gene Redundancy and Amplification: Ribosomal RNA Genes 244 The Bar Eye Mutation in Drosophila 245 The Role of Gene Duplication in Evolution 246 Inversions 247 Consequences of Inversions during Gamete Formation 248 Position Effects of Inversions 248 Evolutionary Consequences of Inversions 250 XVI CONTENTS Translocations 250 Translocations in Humans: Familial Down Syndrome 251 Fragile Sites in Humans 252 Fragile X Syndrome (Martin-Bell Syndrome) 253 FH1TGene and Human Lung Cancer 253 Other Forms of DNA 283 The Structure of RNA 283 Analysis of Nucleic Acids 285 Absorption of Ultraviolet Light (UV) 285 Sedimentation Behavior 285 Denaturation and Renaturation of Nucleic Acids 287 Molecular Hybridization 288 Reassociation Kinetics and Repetitive DNA 288 Electrophoresis of Nucleic Acids 291 11 DNA Replication and Recombination 298 The Mode of DNA Replication 299 PART TWO MOLECULAR BASIS OF HEREDITY 261 10 Structure and Analysis of DNA and RNA 262 Characteristics of the Genetic Material 263 The Genetic Material: 1900-1944 264 Evidence Favoring DNA as the Genetic Material in Bacteria and Bacteriophages 264 Transformation Studies 265 The Hershey-Chase Experiment 268 Transfection Experiments 269 Indirect Evidence Favoring DNA in Eukaryotes 271 Distribution of DNA 271 Mutagenesis 271 Direct Evidence for DNA: Eukaryotic Data 271 RNA as the Genetic Material 272 Nucleic Acid Chemistry 273 Nucleotides: Building Blocks of Nucleic Acids 274 Nucleoside Diphosphates and Triphosphates 275 Polynucleotides 275 The Structure of DNA 277 Base Composition Studies 277 X-Ray Diffraction Analysis 277 The Watson-Crick Model 278 Molecular Structure ofNucleic Acids: A Structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid 280 The Meselson-Stahl Experiment 300 Semiconservative Replication in Eukaryotes 300 Origins, Forks, and Units of Replication 303 Synthesis of DNA in Microorganisms 303 DNA Polymerase I 304 Fidelity of Synthesis 305 Synthesis of Biologically Active DNA 306 DNA Polymerase II and III 308 DNA Synthesis: A Model 309 Unwinding the DNA Helix 309 Initiation of Synthesis 310 Continuous and Discontinuous DNA Synthesis 311 Concurrent Synthesis on the Leading and Lagging Strands 311 Proofreading 312 / Summary of DNA Synthesis 313 Genetic Control of Replication 313 Eukaryotic DNA Synthesis 315 DNA Synthesis at the Ends of Linear Chromosomes 315 DNA Recombination 317 Gene Conversion 317 12 Storage and Expression of Genetic Information 324 An Overview of the Genetic Code 325 Early Thinking about the Code 325 The Code: Further Developments 326 The Study of Frameshift Mutations 326 Deciphering the Code: Initial Studies 327 Nirenberg and Matthaei's Homopolymer Codes 328 The Use of Mixed Copolymers 328 The Triplet Binding Technique 330 The Use of Repeating Copolymers 331 CONTENTS The Coding Dictionary 332 Degeneracy and Wobble, and Order in the Code 332 Initiation, Termination, and Suppression 333 Confirmation of Code Studies: Phage MS2 334 Universality of the Code 334 Reading the Code: The Case of Overlapping Genes 335 Expression of Genetic Information: An Overview 336 Transcription: RNA Synthesis 336 Experimental Evidence for the Existence of mRNA 337 RNA Polymerase 337 Promoters, Template Binding, and the Sigma Subunit 338 The Synthesis of RNA 338 Visualization of Transcription 341 Transcription in Eukaryotes 341 Eukaryotic Promoters, Enhancers, and Transcription Factors 341 Heterogeneous Nuclear RNA and Its Processing: Caps and Tails 342 Intervening Sequences and Split Genes 343 Splicing Mechanisms: Autocatalytic RNAs 345 Splicing Mechanisms: The Spliceosome 346 RNA Editing 346 Translation: Components Necessary for Protein Synthesis 347 Ribosomal Structure 347 tRNA Structure 349 Charging tRNA 350 Translation: The General Process 351 Initiation (Steps 1-3) 351 Elongation (Steps 4-9) 354 Termination (Steps 10-11) 354 Polyribosomes 355 Translation in Eukaryotes 355 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY Genetic Testing Dilemmas: Sickle-Cell Anemia and Breast Cancer 356 13 Proteins: The End Product of Gene Expression 364 Garrod and Bateson: Inborn Errors of Metabolism 365 Phenylketonuria 366 The One-Gene: One-Enzyme Hypothesis 366 Beadle and Ephrussi: Drosophila Eye Pigments 366 XVII Beadle and Tatum: Neurospora Mutants 368 Genes and Enzymes: Analysis of Biochemical Pathways 370 One-Gene: One-Protein/ One-Gene: One-Polypeptide 370 Sickle-Cell Anemia 371 Human Hemoglobins 373 Colinearity 373 Protein Structure and Function 374 Protein Structure 374 Chaperones and Protein Folding 377 Posttranslational Modification and Protein Targeting 378 ' . Protein Function 379 Protein Structure and Function: The Collagen Fiber 380 The Genetics of Collagen 380 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY Prions, Mad Cows, and Heresies 3 82 14 Gene Mutation, DNA Repair, and Transposable Elements 389 Random versus Adaptive Mutations 390 The Luria-Delbruck Fluctuation Test 390 Adaptive Mutation in Bacteria 391 Classification of Mutations 392 Spontaneous versus Induced Mutations 392 Gametic versus Somatic Mutations 393 Other Categories of Mutation 393 Detection of Mutations 394 Detection in Bacteria and Fungi 394 Detection in Drosophila 394 Detection in Plants 396 Detection in Humans 397 ^~">ntaneous Mutation Rate 397 Moit^clar Basis of Mutation 400 Tautomeric Shifts 400 Base Analogues 402 Alkylating Agents 402 Acridine Dyes and Frameshift Mutations 403 Apurinic Sites and Other Lesions 405 Ultraviolet Radiation, Thymine Dimers, and the SOS Response 406 Case Studies of Mutations in Humans 407 ABO Blood Types versus Muscular Dystrophy 407 Trinucleotide Repeats in Fragile-X Syndrome, Myotonic Dystrophy, and Huntington Disease 408 Detection of Mutagenicity: The Ames Test 409 XVlll CONTENTS Repair of DNA 409 UV Radiation, Thymine Dimers, and Photoreactivation Repair 409 Excision Repair 410 Proofreading and Mismatch Repair 411 The SOS Response: Recombinational Repair 411 UV Radiation and Human Skin Cancer: Xeroderma Pigmentosum 412 Somatic Cell Hybridization, XP, and Excision Repair 413 High-Energy Radiation 413 Site-Directed Mutagenesis 414 Knockout Genes and Transgenes 415 Transposable Genetic Elements 416 Insertion Sequences 416 Bacterial Transposons 416 The Ac-Ds System in Maize 417 Other Mobile Genetic Elements in Plants: Mendel Revisited 418 Copia and P Elements in Drosophila 419 Transposable Elements in Humans 420 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY P Element Transposons: New Age Mutagens 421 15 Recombinant DNA Technology 428 Recombinant DNA Technology: An Overview 429 Making Recombinant DNA 429 Restriction Enzymes 429 Vectors. 431 Plasmid Vectors 431 Lambda and Ml3 Bacteriophage Vectors 434 Cosmid Vectors and Shuttle Vectors 43 5 Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes 436 Cloning DNA in E. coli 437 Cloning in Eukaryotic Hosts 438 Yeast Vectors 439 Yeast Artificial Chromosomes 439 Constructing DNA Libraries 439 Genomic Libraries 439 Chromosome-Specific Libraries 440 cDNA Libraries 441 Identifying Specific Cloned Sequences 442 Probes to Screen for Specific Clones 442 Screening a Library 443 Chromosome Walking 443 Methods for the Analysis of Cloned Sequences 445 Restriction Mapping 445 Southern and Northern Blots 447 DNA Sequencing 449 PCR Analysis 450 Transferring DNA in Eukaryotes 452 Plant Cells 452 Mammalian Cells 452 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY Reporter Gene Technology: Tracking Gene Expression 454 16 Applications of Recombinant DNA Technology 461 Mapping Human Genes 462 RFLPs as Genetic Markers 462 Using RFLPs to Make Linkage Maps 463 Positional Cloning: The Gene for Neurofibromatosis 464 Candidate Genes: The Gene for Marfan Syndrome 465 Diagnosing and Screening Genetic Disorders 466 Deletions in Thalassemia 466 Sickle-Cell Anemia and Prenatal Genotyping 466 Allele-Specific Nucleotides and Genetic Screening 468 Animal Models of Human Genetic Disease: Knockout Mice 469 Gene Therapy 471 Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) 471 New Vectors and Target-Cell Strategies 472 DNA Fingerprints 473 Minisatellites and VNTRs 473 Forensic Applications 474 Genome Analysis 474 Model Organisms: The E. coli Project 475 The Drosophila Genome 475 Human Genome Project 476 After the Genome Projects 477 Biotechnology 478 • Insulin Production 478 Pharmaceutical Products in Animal Hosts 479 Herbicide-Resistant Crop Plants 480 Transgenic Plants and Vaccines 480 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY PCR and DNA Fingerprinting in Forensics: The Case of the Telltale Palo Verde 482 1/ Genomic Organization of DNA 490 Viral and Bacterial Chromosomes 491 Supercoiling and Circular DNA 492 CONTENTS Mitochondrial and Chloroplast DNA 494 Molecular Organization and Function of Mitochondrial DNA 495 Molecular Organization and Function of Chloroplast DNA 496 Organization of DNA in Chromatin 497 Nucleosome Structure 497 Nuclear Scaffolds 500 Heterochromatin 500 Satellite DNA and Repetitive DNA 500 Chromosome Banding 502 Organization of the Eukaryotic Genome 502 Eukaryotic Genomes and the C Value Paradox 503 Repetitive DNA: Centromeres and Telomeres" 503 Repetitive DNA: SINEs, LINEs, and VNTRs 506 Eukaryotic Gene Structure 507 • Exon Shuffling and Protein Domains 508 Multigene Families: The alpha- and beta-Globin Genes 509 The Histone Gene Family 511 Tandem Repeat Families: rRNA Genes 512 Genomic Analysis 512 The Genome Project 513 The Minimal Coding Set 514 PART THREE ADVANCED TOPICS IN GENETIC ANALYSIS 521 18 Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Phages 522 Genetic Regulation in Prokaryotes: An Overview 523 Lactose Metabolism in E. coli: An Inducible Gene System 523 Structural Genes 524 The Discovery of Regulatory Mutations 524 XIX The Operon Model: Negative Control 525 Genetic Proof of the Operon Model 526 Isolation of the Repressor 528 Crystallographic Analysis of the Repressor 528 The Catabolite Activating Protein (CAP): Positive Control of the lac Operon 528 The ara Regulator Protein—Positive and Negative Control 529 Tryptophan Operon in E. coli: A Repressible Gene System 529 Evidence for and Concerning the trp Operon 531 The Attenuator 532 Genetic Regulation in Phage Lambda: Lysogeny or Lysis? 534 Phage Transcription during Lysis 536 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY ; Antisense Oligonudeotides: Attacking the Messenger 538 • ' 19 Regulation of Gene Expression in Eukaryotes 544 Eukaryotic Gene Regulation: An Overview 545 Regulatory Elements and Eukaryotic Genes 545 Promoters 546 Enhancers 546 Transcription Factors Bind to Promoters and Enhancers 548 Genetic Analysis of Transcription Factors 548 Structural Motifs of Transcription Factors 549 Assembling the Transcription Complex 551 How Are Transcription Factors Controlled? 551 Genomic Alterations and Gene Expression 554 DNAMethylation 554 Gene Amplification 556 Posttranscriptional Regulation of Gene Expression 558 Alternative Processing Pathways for mRNA 558 Controlling mRNA Stability 560 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY Entrapping Genes That Regulate Development 562 2 0 Developmental Genetics 567 Developmental Concepts 568 The Variable Gene Activity Theory 568 Differential Transcription in Development: Prokaryotes 568 XX CONTENTS Differential Transcription in Development: Eukaryotes 569 Genome Equivalence 570 Binary Switch Genes 572 • Genetics of Embryonic Development in Drosophila 573 Overview of Drosophila Development 574 Genetic Analysis of Embryogenesis 576 Maternal-Effect Genes and the Basic Body Plan in Drosophila 577 Formation of the Anterior-Posterior Axis 578 The Posterior and Terminal Gene Sets 578 Zygotic Genes and Segment Formation 580 Gap Genes 580 Pair-Rule Genes 580 Segment-Polarity Genes 581 Selector Genes 581 Cell-Cell Interactions in C. elegans Development 584 Overview of C. elegans Development 584 Genetic Analysis of Vulva Formation 585 21 Genetics and Cancer 591 The Cell Cycle and Cancer 592 The Cell Cycle 592 Checkpoints and Control of the Cell Cycle 593 Cell-Cycle Regulation and Cancer 594 Genes and Cancer 594 Genes That Predispose to Cancer 594 How Many Mutations Are Needed? 595 Tumor Suppressor Genes 595 Retinoblastoma (RB) 596 Wilms Tumor 597 Breast Cancer 598 The p53 Gene and the Cell Cycle 598 Oncogenes 599 Rous Sarcoma Virus and Oncogenes 599 Mutations and Oncogenes 599 Oncogenes and Gene Expression 600 Metastasis Is Genetically Controlled 601 The Spread of Cancer Cells 601 Metastasis and Abnormal Gene Regulation 602 A Genetic Model for Colon Cancer 603 Colon Cancer Develops in Stages 603 Genetic and Environmental Factors in Colon Cancer 604 Genomic Changes and Cancer 604 Chromosome Rearrangements and Cancer 604 Translocations and Hybrid Genes 604 Genomic Instability and Cancer 605 Cancer and Environmental Agents 606 Hepatitis B and Cancer 606 Environmental Agents 607 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY The Cancer-Yeast Connection: The Seattle Project 608 22 Genetic Basis of the Immune Response 614 Components of the Immune System 615 Cells of the Immune System 615 The Immune Response 616 Antibody-Mediated Immunity 616 Cell-Mediated Immunity 618 Immunological Memory and Immunization 619 Genetic Diversity in the Immune System 619 Antibodies 619 Theories of Antibody Formation 620 Organization of the Immunoglobulin Genes 621 Organization of T-Cell Receptors 62 3 Recombination in the Immune System 624 Blood Groups 624 ABO System 624 Rh Incompatibility 624 The HLA System 626 HLA Genes 626 Organ and Tissue Transplantation 627 HLA and Disease 627 Disorders of the Immune System 62 8 The Genetics of Immunodeficiency 628 Acquired Immunodeficiencies: DiGeorge Syndrome and AIDS 629 Autoimmunity 631 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY Why Is There Still No Effective Vaccine against AIDS? 632 23 The Genetics of Behavior 637 The Methodology of Behavior Genetics 638 The Comparative Approach 638 Artificial Selection 639 Analysis of Single Gene Effects 641 Genetic Analysis of Behavior in Drosophila 646 Mosaics 647 CONTENTS Neurogenetics 650 Learning in Drosophila 651 Human Behavioral Genetics 652 Single Genes 652 Multifactorial Traits 653 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY ' Coining to Terms with the Heritability oflQ 654 24 Population Genetics 659 Populations and Gene Pools 660 Calculating Allele Frequencies 660 The Hardy-Weinberg Law 660 Assumptions for the Hardy-Weinberg Law 661 Testing for Equilibrium 662 Extensions of the Hardy-Weinberg Law 663 X-Linked Genes 664 Multiple Alleles 664 Using the Hardy-Weinberg Law: Calculating Heterozygote Frequency 665 Factors That Alter Allele Frequencies in Populations 666 Mutation 666 Migration 667 Natural Selection 668 Fitness and Selection 670 Selection in Natural Populations 671 Genetic Drift 672 Inbreeding 673 Nonrandom Mating 674 Genetic Effects of Inbreeding 675 GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY ; The Failure of the Eugenics Movement: What Did We Learn? 616 25 Genetics and Evolution 681 Wallace, Darwin and the Origin of Species 682 Models of Speciation 682 Allopatric Speciation 683 Sympatric Speciation 683 Statispatric Speciation 684 Isolating Mechanisms 684 The Rate of Speciation 684 Measuring Genetic Variation 688 Inbreeding Depression 688 Protein Polymorphisms 688 Variations in Nucleotide Sequence 689 Evolution and Genetic Variation: A Dilemma 690 Neutralists and Variation 690 Selectionists and Variation 690 Formation of Species 691 Using Molecular Techniques to Study Evolution 694 Measuring the Genetic Distance between Species 694 Protein Evolution 695 The Molecular Clock 696 Phylogenetic Trees 696 Molecular Studies on Human Evolution 697 ; GENETICS, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY ; DNA from Fossils: The Quest for Dinosaur Genes 698 APPENDIX A: Experimental Methods A-l APPENDIX B: Glossary B-l APPENDIX C: Solutions to Selected Even-Numbered Problems and Discussion Questions C-1 CREDITS CR-1 INDEX 1-1