* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download continued
Skewed X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Neocentromere wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Y chromosome wikipedia , lookup
Genomic imprinting wikipedia , lookup
X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Dominance (genetics) wikipedia , lookup
Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 10 Patterns of Inheritance Lecture Outlines by Gregory Ahearn, University of North Florida Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Chapter 10 At a Glance 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? 10.6 How Is Sex Determined? Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Chapter 10 At a Glance (continued) 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? 10.9 How Are Human Genetic Disorders Investigated? 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? Genes are sequences of nucleotides at specific locations on chromosomes – Inheritance is the process by which the characteristics of individuals are passed to their offspring – A gene is a unit of heredity that encodes information needed to produce proteins, cells, and entire organisms – Genes comprise segments of DNA ranging from a few hundred to many thousands of nucleotides in length – The location of a gene on a chromosome is called its locus (plural, loci) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? Genes are sequences of nucleotides at specific locations on chromosomes (continued) – Homologous chromosomes carry the same kinds of genes for the same characteristics – Genes for the same characteristic are found at the same loci on both homologous chromosomes Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? Genes are sequences of nucleotides at specific locations on chromosomes (continued) – Genes for a characteristic found on homologous chromosomes may not be identical – Alternative versions of genes found at the same gene locus are called alleles Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? Mutations are the source of alleles – Alleles arise as mutations in the nucleotide sequence in genes – If a mutation occurs in the cells that become sperm or eggs, it can be passed on from parent to offspring Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? An organism’s two alleles may be the same or different – Each cell carries two alleles per characteristic, one on each of the two homologous chromosomes – If both homologous chromosomes carry the same allele (gene form) at a given gene locus, the organism is homozygous at that locus Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.1 What Is the Physical Basis of Inheritance? An organism’s two alleles may be the same or different (continued) – If two homologous chromosomes carry different alleles at a given locus, the organism is heterozygous at that locus (a hybrid) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. The Relationship Among Genes, Alleles, and Chromosomes a pair of homologous chromosomes Both chromosomes carry the same allele of the gene at this locus; the organism is homozygous at this locus gene loci This locus contains another gene for which the organism is homozygous Each chromosome carries a different allele of this gene, so the organism is heterozygous at this locus the chromosome from the male parent Biology: Life on Earth, 9e the chromosome from the female parent Fig. 10-1 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success – Who was Gregor Mendel? – Mendel was an Austrian monk in a monastery in the late 1800s – He discovered the common patterns of inheritance and many essential facts about genes, alleles, and the distribution of alleles in gametes and zygotes during sexual reproduction – He chose the edible pea plant for his experiments, which took place in the monastery garden – Mendel’s background allowed him to see patterns in the way plant characteristics were inherited Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Gregor Mendel Fig. 10-2 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success (continued) – Mendel was the first to perform experiments by correctly applying three key scientific steps to his research: –Choosing the right organism –Designing and performing the experiment correctly –Analyzing the data properly Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success (continued) – Pea plants have qualities that make it a good organism for studying inheritance – Pea flowers have stamens, the male structures that produce pollen, that in turn contain the sperm (male gametes); sperm are gametes and pollen is the vehicle – Pea flowers have carpels, female structures housing the ovaries, which produce the eggs (female gametes) – Pea flower petals enclose both male and female flower parts and prevent entry of pollen from another pea plant Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Flowers of the Edible Pea intact pea flower flower dissected to show its reproductive structures Carpel (female, produces eggs) Stamen (male, produces pollen that contain sperm) Fig. 10-3 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success (continued) – Because of their structure, pea flowers naturally self-fertilize –Pollen from the stamen of a plant transfers to the carpel of the same plant, where the sperm then fertilizes the plant’s eggs Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success (continued) – Mendel was able to mate two different plants by hand (cross-fertilization) –Female parts (carpels) were dusted with pollen from other selected plants Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success (continued) – Unlike previous researchers, Mendel chose a simple experimental design –He chose to study individual characteristics (called traits) that had unmistakably different forms, such as white versus purple flowers –He started out by studying only one trait at a time Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.2 How Were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered? Doing it right: The secrets of Mendel’s success (continued) – Mendel employed numerical analysis in studying the traits –He followed the inheritance of these traits for several generations, counting the numbers of offspring with each type of trait –By analyzing these numbers, he saw the basic patterns of inheritance emerge Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Research into inheritance begins with parental organisms that have easily identified traits that are inherited consistently from generation to generation Pea plants that are homozygous for a particular characteristic always produce the same physical forms – If a plant is homozygous for purple flowers, it will always produce offspring with purple flowers – Plants homozygous for a characteristic are truebreeding Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The language of a genetic cross – A genetic cross is the mating of pollen and eggs (from same or different parents) – The parents used in a cross are part of the parental generation (known as P) – The offspring of the P generation are members of the first filial generation (F1) – Offspring of the F1 generation are members of the F2 generation Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Mendel’s flower color experiments – Mendel crossed a true-breeding purple flower plant with a true-breeding white-flower plant (the P generation) – The F1 generation consisted of all purpleflowered plants –What had happened to the white-flowered trait? Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Cross of Pea Plants True-Breeding for White or Purple Flowers pollen Parental generation (P) pollen cross-fertilize true-breeding, purple-flowered plant true-breeding, white-flowered plant First-generation offspring (F1) all purple-flowered plants Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-4 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Mendel’s flower color experiments (continued) – Mendel allowed the F1 generation to self-fertilize – The F2 was composed of 3/4 purple-flowered plants and 1/4 white-flowered plants, a ratio of 3:1 – The results showed that the white trait had not disappeared in the F1 but merely was hidden Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Author Animation: Self- and Cross-Pollination of Pea Plants Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Self-Fertilization of F1 Pea Plants with Purple Flowers Firstgeneration offspring (F1) self-fertilize Secondgeneration offspring (F2) 3/4 purple Biology: Life on Earth, 9e 1/4 white Fig. 10-5 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Mendel’s flower color experiments (continued) – Mendel then self-fertilized the F2 generation – In the F3 generation, all the white-flowered F2 plants produced white-flowered offspring –These proved to be true-breeding Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Mendel’s flower color experiments (continued) – In the F3 generation, self-fertilized purple-flowered F2 plants produced two types of offspring – About 1/3 were true-breeding for purple – The other 2/3 were hybrids that produced both purpleand white-flowered offspring, again, in the ratio of 3 purple to 1 white – Therefore, the F2 generation included 1/4 truebreeding purple-flowered plants, 1/2 hybrid purple, and 1/4 true-breeding white-flowered plants Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The inheritance of dominant and recessive alleles on homologous chromosomes can explain the results of Mendel’s crosses – A five-part hypothesis explains the inheritance of single traits 1. Each trait is determined by pairs of genes; each organism has two alleles for each gene, one on each homologous chromosome – True-breeding white-flowered plants have different alleles than true-breeding purple-flowered plants 2. When two different alleles are present in an organism, the dominant allele may mask the recessive allele, even though the recessive allele is still present – In edible peas the purple-flower trait is dominant to the white-flower trait Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? A five-part hypothesis explains the inheritance of single traits (continued) 3. The pairs of alleles on homologous chromosomes separate, or segregate, from each other during meiosis, which is known as Mendel’s law of segregation 4. Chance determines which allele is included in a given gamete—because homologous chromosomes separate at random during meiosis; the distribution of alleles to the gametes is also random Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? A five-part hypothesis explains the inheritance of single traits (continued) 5. True-breeding organisms have two copies of the same allele for a given gene and are homozygous for that gene; hybrid organisms have two different alleles for a given gene and are heterozygous for that gene Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. The Distribution of Alleles in Gametes homozygous parent A A gametes A A (a) Gametes produced by a homozygous parent heterozygous parent A a gametes A a (b) Gametes produced by a heterozygous parent Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-6 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The hypothesis explains Mendel’s results with peas – The particular combination of the two alleles carried by an individual is called the genotype – The physical expression of the genotype is known as the phenotype (for example, purple or white flowers) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The hypothesis explains Mendel’s results with peas (continued) – There are two alleles for a given gene characteristic (such as flower color) – Let P stand for the dominant purple-flowered allele: A homozygous purple-colored plant has two alleles for purple flower color (PP) and produces only P gametes – Let p stand for the recessive white-flowered allele: A homozygous white-colored plant has two alleles for white flower color (pp) and produces only p gametes Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The hypothesis explains Mendel’s results with peas (continued) – A cross between a purple-flowered plant (PP) and a white-flowered plant (pp) produces all purple-flowered F1 offspring, with a Pp genotype –Dominant P gametes from purple-flowered plants combined with recessive p gametes from white-flowered plants to produce hybrid purple-flowered plants (Pp) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The hypothesis explains Mendel’s results with peas (continued) – The F1 offspring were all heterozygous (Pp) for flower color – When the F1 offspring were allowed to selffertilize, four types of gametes were produced from the Pp parents –Sperm: Pp –Eggs: Pp Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The hypothesis explains Mendel’s results with peas (continued) – A heterozygous plant produces equal numbers of P and p sperm and equal numbers of P and p eggs – When a Pp plant self-fertilizes, each type of sperm has an equal chance of fertilizing each type of egg – Combining these four gametes into genotypes in every possible way produces offspring PP, Pp, Pp, and pp – The probabilities of each combination (and therefore the genotypic fraction each genotype is of the total offspring) are 1/4 PP, 1/2 Pp, and 1/4 pp Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Segregation of Alleles and Fusion of Gametes purple parent P PP + P all P sperm and eggs white parent pp p + p all p sperm and eggs (a) Gametes produced by homozygous parents Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-7a Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Segregation of Alleles and Fusion of Gametes F1 offspring sperm P eggs + p Pp P Pp or p + (b) Fusion of gametes produces F1 offspring Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-7b Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Segregation of Alleles and Fusion of Gametes gametes from F1 Pp plants sperm eggs F2 offspring P + P PP P + p Pp p + P Pp p + p pp (c) Fusion of gametes from the F1 generation produces F2 offspring Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-7c Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Simple “genetic bookkeeping” can predict genotypes and phenotypes of offspring – The Punnett square method predicts offspring genotypes and phenotypes from combinations of parental gametes 1. First, assign letters to the different alleles of the characteristic under consideration (uppercase for dominant, lowercase for recessive) 2. Determine the gametes and their fractional proportions (out of all the gametes) from both parents Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The Punnett square method predicts offspring genotypes from combinations of parental gametes (continued) 3. Write the gametes from each parent, together with their fractional proportions, along each side of a 2 x 2 grid (Punnett square) 4. Fill in the genotypes of each pair of combined gametes in the grid, including the product of the fractions of each gamete (e.g., 1/4 PP, 1/4 Pp and 1/4 pP, and 1/4 pp) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The Punnett square method predicts offspring genotypes from combinations of parental gametes (continued) 5. Add together the fractions of any genotypes of the same kind (1/4 Pp + 1/4 pP = 1/2 Pp total) 6. From the sums of all the different kinds of offspring genotypes, create a genotypic fraction – 1/4 PP, 1/2 Pp, 1/4 pp is in the ratio 1 PP : 2 Pp : 1 pp Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? The Punnett square method predicts offspring genotypes from combinations of parental gametes (continued) 7. Based on dominant and recessive rules, determine the phenotypic fraction – A genotypic ratio of 1 PP : 2 Pp : 1 pp yields 3 purple-flowered plants : 1 whiteflowered plant Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Author Animation: The Inheritance of Single Traits Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Determining the Outcome of a Single-Trait Cross Pp self-fertilize 1 2 P eggs p 1 2 1 2 genotypic phenotypic ratio ratio (1:2:1) (3:1) P sperm 1 2 offspring genotypes eggs sperm 1 4 PP 1 4 pP 1 4 pp (a) Punnett square of a single-trait cross Biology: Life on Earth, 9e P 1 2 P 1 4 PP 1 2 P 1 2 p 1 4 Pp 1 4 PP Pp p 1 4 1 2 1 2 p 1 2 P 1 4 pP 1 2 p 1 2 p 1 4 pp 1 2 Pp 1 4 pp 3 4 purple 1 4 white (b) Using probabilities to determine the offspring of a single-trait cross Fig. 10-8 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.3 How Are Single Traits Inherited? Mendel’s hypothesis can be used to predict the outcome of new types of single-trait crosses – A test cross is used to deduce whether an organism with a dominant phenotype is homozygous for the dominant allele or heterozygous 1. Cross the unknown dominant-phenotype organism (P_) with a homozygous recessive organism (pp) 2. If the dominant-phenotype organism is homozygous dominant (PP), only dominant-phenotype offspring will be produced (Pp) 3. If the dominant-phenotype organism is heterozygous (Pp), approximately half the offspring will be of recessive phenotype (pp) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Punnett Square of a Test Cross pollen pp all eggs p PP or Pp sperm unknown if Pp if PP p p eggs eggs all Pp sperm 1 2 P all P sperm 1 2 Pp 1 p 2 1 2 pp Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-9 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel next tested his hypothesis that multiple traits are inherited independently – Mendel performed genetic crosses in which he followed the inheritance of two traits at the same time Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Traits of Pea Plants Studied by Gregor Mendel Trait Dominant form Recessive form Seed shape smooth wrinkled Seed color yellow green Pod shape inflated constricted Pod color green yellow purple white Flower color Flower location at leaf junctions Plant size Biology: Life on Earth, 9e tall (about 6 feet) at tips of branches dwarf (about 8 to 16 inches) Fig. 10-10 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel next tested his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently (continued) – From the many pea plant phenotypes, he chose seed color (yellow vs. green peas) and seed shape (smooth vs. wrinkled peas) –Yellow color is dominant to green color –Smooth shape is dominant to wrinkled – The allele symbols were assigned, as follows: –Y = yellow (dominant), y = green (recessive) –S = smooth (dominant), s = wrinkled (recessive) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel next tested his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently (continued) – The two-trait cross was between two true-breeding varieties for each characteristic, one dominant for both traits, the other recessive for both traits – P: SSYY (smooth, yellow) ssyy (wrinkled, green – The SSYY plant produced only SY gametes, and the ssyy plant produced only sy gametes – Therefore, the F1 consisted solely of SsYy individuals, with smooth skins and yellow coloring Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel next tested his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently (continued) – Mendel next allowed the F1 individuals to selffertilize: SsYy SsYy – Crossing the F1 plants yielded 315 plants with smooth, yellow seeds; 101 with wrinkled, yellow seeds; 108 with smooth, green seeds; and 32 with wrinkled, green seeds –This is a ratio of approximately 9:3:3:1 – Two-trait crosses of other traits produced similar proportions of phenotype combinations Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Predicting Genotypes and Phenotypes for a Cross between Parents That Are Heterozygous for Two Traits SsYy self-fertilize eggs 1 SY 4 sperm 1 SY 4 1 Sy 4 1 sY 4 1 sy 4 1 4 Sy 1 sY 4 1 4 sy 1 16 SSYY 1 16 SSYy 1 16 SsYY 1 16 SsYy 1 16 SSyY 1 16 SSyy 1 16 SsyY 1 16 Ssyy 1 16 sSYY 1 16 sSyY 1 16 sSYy 1 16 sSyy 1 16 ssYY 1 16 ssyY (a) Punnett square of a two-trait cross 1 16 ssYy 1 16 ssyy seed shape seed color 3 4 smooth 3 4 yellow 3 4 smooth 1 4 green 1 4 wrinkled 3 4 yellow phenotypic ratio (9:3:3:1) 9 16 smooth yellow 3 16 smooth green 3 16 wrinkled yellow 1 1 1 16 wrinkled green 4 wrinkled 4 green (b) Using probabilities to determine the offspring of a two-trait cross Fig. 10-11 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel’s results supported his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently – Mendel predicted that if the two traits were inherited independently, then for each trait, threequarters of the offspring should show the dominant phenotype and one-quarter should show the recessive phenotype — a 3:1 ratio, as he had found for the single trait flower color Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel’s results supported his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently (continued) – He found 423 plants with smooth seeds (of either color) and 133 with wrinkled seeds (a ratio of about 3:1) – He found 416 plants produced yellow seeds (of either shape) and 140 produced green seeds (also about 3:1) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel’s results supported his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently (continued) – The independent inheritance of two or more traits is called the law of independent assortment – Multiple traits are inherited independently because the alleles of one gene are distributed to gametes independently of the alleles for other genes – Independent assortment will occur when the traits being studied are controlled by genes on different pairs of homologous chromosomes Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Author Animation: The Inheritance of Multiple Traits Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? Mendel’s results supported his hypothesis that traits are inherited independently (continued) – The physical basis of independent assortment has to do with the way homologous pairs line up during meiosis – Which of the two homologues is “on top” occurs randomly for all pairs, so the homologues assort randomly and independently of one another at anaphase I Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Independent Assortment of Alleles S s pairs of alleles on homologous chromosomes in diploid cells Y y chromosomes replicate S Y s y replicated homologous pair during metaphase of meiosis I, orienting like this or like this y S s Y meiosis I S Y s y S y s Y S Y s y S y s Y meiosis II S S Y s Y SY S s y y sy y y Sy independent assortment produces four equally likely allele combinations during meiosis Biology: Life on Earth, 9e s s S Y Y sY Fig. 10-12 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.4 How Are Multiple Traits Inherited? In an unprepared world, genius may go unrecognized – Mendel’s work was published in 1865 but went unnoticed – Three biologists—Carl Correns, Hugo de Vries, and Erich Tschermak—independently (of Mendel and each other) rediscovered Mendel’s principles of inheritance in 1900 – Mendel was credited in new papers as laying the groundwork of genetics 30 years previously Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? Genes on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together – Mendel’s law of independent assortment works only for genes whose loci are on different pairs of homologous chromosomes – Alleles that are on the same chromosome do not line up independently of one another on the metaphase plate and are not separated at anaphase I Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? Genes on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together (continued) – Different gene loci located on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together – Characteristics whose genes tend to assort together are said to be linked Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? Genes on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together (continued) – An example of genetic linkage is flower color and pollen in sweet peas –The genes for flower color and pollen shape are linked; that is, their loci are on the same chromosome –Purple flower color is dominant to red; long pollen shape is dominant to round –Let P = purple flowers and p = red flowers –Let L = long pollen shape and l = round shape Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? Genes on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together (continued) – The pattern of inheritance for linked genes is different from genes that assort independently –What are the expected gametes from parent PpLl, where P is linked with L and p is linked with l ? –Independent assortment would yield gametes in a genetic proportion of 1/4 PL, 1/4 Pl, 1/4 pL, 1/4 pl –Instead, the gametes are mostly PL and pl Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Linked Genes on Homologous Chromosomes flower-color gene pollen-shape gene purple allele, P long allele, L red allele, p round allele, l Fig. 10-13 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? Crossing over creates new combinations of linked alleles – Genes on the same chromosome do not always sort together – Crossing over, or genetic recombination, in prophase I of meiosis creates new gene combinations – Crossing over involves the exchange of DNA between chromatids of paired homologous chromosomes in synapsis (the tight association of homologous chromosomes on the metaphase plate) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.5 How Are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited? Crossing over creates new combinations of linked alleles (continued) – The farther apart two linked gene loci are on a chromosome, the more likely crossing over is to occur between them – Crossing over occurs so often between loci far apart on a chromosome that they appear to assort independently – They appear to assort randomly because roughly as many gametes are produced with the genes exchanged by crossing over as are produced in which the original, linked combination of alleles occurs Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Crossing Over Recombines Alleles on Homologous Chromosomes flower-color gene pollen-shape gene sister chromatids purple allele, P long allele, L homologous chromosomes (duplicated) at meiosis I sister chromatids red allele, p round allele, l (a) Replicated chromosomes in prophase of meiosis I P L P L p l p (b) Crossing over during prophase I l Fig. 10-14a, b Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Crossing Over Recombines Alleles on Homologous Chromosomes P p recombined chromatids L P L p L P l p l L P l p l unchanged chromatids (c) Homologous chromosomes separate at anaphase I recombined chromosomes unchanged chromosomes (d) Unchanged and recombined chromosomes after meiosis II Fig. 10-14c, d Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.6 How Is Sex Determined? Mammals have a set of sex chromosomes that dictate gender – Females have two X chromosomes – Males have an X chromosome and a Y chromosome – The Y chromosome is much smaller than the X chromosome – A small section of the X and Y chromosomes is homologous, allowing them to pair in prophase I and segregate during meiosis – The rest of the (non-sex) chromosomes occur in identical pairs and are called autosomes Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Photomicrograph of Human Sex Chromosomes Y chromosome X chromosome Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-15 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.6 How Is Sex Determined? Mammals have a set of sex chromosomes that dictate gender (continued) – For organisms in which males are XY and females are XX, the sex chromosome carried by the sperm determines the sex of the offspring – During sperm formation, each sperm receives either the X or the Y chromosome, along with a copy of each of the autosomes – Because the female has only X sex chromosomes, the unfertilized egg must have an X chromosome – If the egg is fertilized by a sperm with a Y chromosome, a male results; if fertilized by an Xbearing sperm, a female is produced Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Sex Determination in Mammals female parent X1 X2 eggs X1 X1 male parent Y Xm X2 Xm Xm female offspring sperm Xm X2 X1 Y X2 Y Y male offspring Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-16 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosome – Genes carried on one sex chromosome, but not on the other, are sex-linked –In humans, the X chromosome is much larger than the Y and carries over 1,000 genes –In contrast, the human Y chromosome is smaller and carries only 78 genes Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – During embryonic life, the action of the Y-linked gene SRY sets in motion the entire male developmental pathway –Under normal conditions, SRY causes the male gender to be linked 100 percent to the Y chromosome Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – Few of the genes on the X chromosome have a specific role in female reproduction – Most of the genes on the X chromosome have no counterpart on the Y chromosome –Some genes found only on the X chromosome are important to both sexes, such as genes for color vision, blood clotting, and certain structural proteins in muscles Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – The X and the Y have very few genes in common – Females (XX) can be homozygous or heterozygous for a characteristic – Males (XY) have only one copy of the genes on the X or the Y Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – Because females have two X chromosomes, recessive sex-linked genes on an X chromosome may or may not be expressed – Because males, with only one X chromosome, have no second copy to mask recessive genes, they fully express all the X-linked alleles they have, whether those alleles are dominant or recessive Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – Red-green color blindness in humans is a sexlinked trait – Color blindness is caused by recessive alleles of either of two genes located on the X chromosome – The normal, dominant alleles of these genes (called C) encode proteins that allow one set of eye cones to be most sensitive to red light and another to be most sensitive to green light Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – There are several defective recessive alleles of these genes, called c –The afflicted person cannot distinguish between red and green – A man can have the genotype CY or cY, which means that he has a color-vision allele C or c on his X chromosome and no corresponding gene on his Y chromosome Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – He will have normal color vision if his X chromosome bears the C allele, or be color-blind if his X chromosome bears the c allele – A woman may be CC, Cc, or cc because she has two X chromosomes that each can carry an allele for the trait and will only be color-blind if her genotype is cc Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.7 How Are Sex-Linked Genes Inherited? Sex-linked genes are found only on the X or only on the Y chromosomes (continued) – A color-blind man (cY) will pass his defective allele only to his daughters because only his daughters inherit his X chromosome – A heterozygous woman (Cc), although she has normal color vision, will pass her defective allele to half her sons, who will be color-blind Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Sex-Linked Inheritance of Color Blindness The individual cannot distinguish red from green female parent XC (a) Normal color vision Xc (b) Red-green color blindness eggs XC XC male parent Y XC Xc XC XC female offspring sperm XC Xc XC Y Xc Y Y male offspring (c) Expected children of a man with normal color vision (CY), and a heterozygous woman (Cc) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Fig. 10-17 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Many traits do not follow simple Mendelian rules of inheritance – Not all traits are completely controlled by a single gene – A trait may not be completely dominant to another Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Incomplete dominance – In the genes studied by Mendel, one allele was dominant over the other, which was recessive – Some alleles, however, are incompletely dominant over others – When the heterozygous phenotype is intermediate between the two homozygous phenotypes, the pattern of inheritance is called incomplete dominance Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Incomplete dominance (continued) – Human hair texture is influenced by a gene with two incompletely dominant alleles, C1 and C2 –A person with two copies of the C1 allele has curly hair –Someone with two copies of the C2 allele has straight hair –Heterozygotes (with the C1C2 genotype) have wavy hair Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Incomplete dominance (continued) – If two wavy-haired people marry, their children could have any of the three hair types: curly (C1C1), wavy (C1C2), or straight (C2C2) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Incomplete Dominance mother C1C2 C1 C1C2 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e C2 C1 sperm father eggs C1C1 C1C2 C1C2 C2C2 C2 Fig. 10-18 Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles – An individual may have at most two different gene alleles – A species may have multiple alleles for a given characteristic –However, each individual still carries two alleles for this characteristic Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles (continued) – The human blood types are an example of multiple alleles of a single gene – Human blood group genes produce blood types A, B, AB, and O –There are three alleles in this system: A, B, and o Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles (continued) – Alleles A and B code for enzymes that add different sugar molecules to the ends of glycoproteins that protrude from red blood cells – Allele o codes for a nonfunctional enzyme that doesn’t add any sugar molecules – Blood types A, B, AB, and O arise as a result of the actions of these alleles Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles (continued) – Alleles A and B are dominant to allele o – People with AA or Ao genotypes have blood type A; people with BB or Bo genotypes have blood type B; people with oo genotypes have blood type O – AB individuals have both the A and the B allele, so they produce both types of enzymes – Consequently, the plasma membranes of their red blood cells have both A and B glycoproteins – When heterozygotes express the phenotypes of both of the homozygotes (in this case, both A and B glycoproteins), the pattern of inheritance is called codominance Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles (continued) – People make antibodies to the type of glycoproteins they lack –People with type A blood make B antibodies; people with type B blood make A antibodies –People with type O blood make both type A and type B antibodies; type AB blood groups make no antibodies Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles (continued) – The antibodies cause red blood cells that bear foreign glycoproteins to clump together and rupture – The presence of such antibodies dictates that blood type must be determined and matched carefully before a blood transfusion is made Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? A single gene may have multiple alleles (continued) – Type O blood, lacking any sugars, is not attacked by antibodies in A, B, or AB blood, so it can be transfused safely to all – Type O blood is called the universal donor – The A and B antibodies in type O blood become too dilute to cause problems in the recipient of transfused type O blood – Because people with type O blood produce both A and B antibodies, they can receive blood only from other type O donors – Their antibodies would attack any donated blood cells bearing A or B glycoproteins Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Table 10-1 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Polygenic inheritance – Some characteristics show a range of continuous phenotypes instead of discrete, defined phenotypes –Examples of this include human height, skin color, and body build, and in wheat, grain color Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Polygenic inheritance (continued) – Phenotypes produced by polygenic inheritance are governed by the interaction of more than two genes at multiple loci – Human skin color is controlled by at least three genes, each with pairs of incompletely dominant alleles Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Polygenic Inheritance of Skin Color in Humans Fig. 10-19 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Single genes typically have multiple effects on phenotype – Some alleles of a characteristic may have multiple phenotypic effects (pleiotropy) influencing a number of gene loci – The SRY gene on the Y chromosome in male humans encodes a protein that activates other genes – The SRY gene stimulates development of gonads into testes, which in turn stimulate development of the prostate, seminal vesicles, penis, and scrotum Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? The environment influences the expression of genes – The environment in which an organism lives profoundly affects its phenotype – Newborn Siamese cats demonstrate the effect of environment on phenotype –A Siamese cat has the genotype for dark fur all over its body –However, the enzyme that produces the dark pigment is inactive at temperatures above 93°F (34°C) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.8 Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to All Traits? Newborn Siamese cats demonstrate the effect of environment on phenotype (continued) – When kittens are in the all-encompassing warmth of their mother’s uterus, the enzyme is inactive and they are born with pale fur everywhere on their bodies – After birth, the ears, nose, paws, and tail become cooler than the rest of the body, and dark pigment is produced there in the pattern characteristic of the breed Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Environmental Influence on Phenotype Fig. 10-20 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.9 How Are Human Genetic Disorders Investigated? Many human diseases are influenced by genetics – Human geneticists trying to understand the relationship between genetics and disease search medical, historical, and family records to study past crosses – Geneticists studying humans are proscribed from using breeding techniques employed with plants and other animals – Records of gene expression over several generations of a family can be diagrammed – Records extending across several generations can be arranged in the form of family pedigrees, diagrams that show the genetic relationships between a set of related individuals Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.9 How Are Human Genetic Disorders Investigated? Many human diseases are influenced by genetics (continued) – Pedigree analysis is often combined with molecular genetics technology to elucidate gene action and expression – As a result, scientists now know the genes responsible for sickle-cell anemia, hemophilia, muscular dystrophy, Marfan syndrome, and cystic fibrosis Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Family Pedigrees How to read pedigrees generations male female parents (a) A pedigree for a dominant trait offspring ? ? ? ? ? or shows trait or does not show trait or known carrier (heterozygote) for recessive trait ? ? (b) A pedigree for a recessive trait ? or ? cannot determine the genotype from this pedigree Fig. 10-21 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are caused by recessive alleles – New alleles produced by mutation usually code for nonfunctional proteins – Alleles coding for nonfunctional proteins are recessive to those coding for functional ones –The presence of one normal allele may generate enough functional protein to enable heterozygotes to be phenotypically indistinguishable from homozygotes with two normal alleles Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are caused by recessive alleles (continued) – Heterozygous individuals are carriers of a recessive genetic trait (but otherwise have a normal phenotype) – Recessive genes are more likely to occur in a homozygous combination (expressing the defective phenotype) when related individuals have children – Close relatives are more likely than the general population to each be heterozygous for a particular recessive allele and, so, are more likely to produce the homozygous recessive phenotype Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Albinism results from a defect in melanin production – Melanin is the dark pigment that colors skin cells – Melanin is produced by the enzyme tyrosinase – An allele known as TYR (for tyrosinase) encodes a defective tyrosinase protein in skin cells, producing no melanin and a condition called albinism Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Albinism results from a defect in melanin production (continued) – Humans and other mammals who are homozygous for TYR have no color in their skin, fur, or eyes (the skin and hair appear white, and the eyes are pink) Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Albinism Fig. 10-22 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Sickle-cell anemia is caused by a defective allele for hemoglobin synthesis – Hemoglobin is an oxygen-transporting protein found in red blood cells – A mutant hemoglobin gene causes hemoglobin molecules in blood cells to clump together – Red blood cells take on a sickle (crescent) shape and easily break – Blood clots can form, leading to oxygen starvation of downstream tissues and paralysis – The condition is known as sickle-cell anemia Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Sickle-cell anemia is caused by a defective allele for hemoglobin synthesis (continued) – People homozygous for the sickle-cell allele synthesize only defective hemoglobin and therefore produce mostly sickled cells – Although heterozygotes have about half normal and half abnormal hemoglobin, they usually have few sickled cells and are not seriously affected – Because only people who are homozygous for the sicklecell allele usually show symptoms, sickle-cell anemia is considered a recessive disorder Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Sickle-cell anemia is caused by a defective allele for hemoglobin synthesis (continued) – About 20 to 40 percent of sub-Saharan Africans are heterozygous for sickle-cell anemia, but the allele is very rare in Caucasians – The large proportion of heterozygotes in Africa exists because heterozygotes have some resistance to the parasite that causes malaria – The rarity of heterozygotes in Caucasians corresponds with the rarity of malaria in northern climes, where immunity (and therefore, heterozygosity) has no selective advantage Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Sickle-Cell Anemia Fig. 10-23 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are caused by dominant alleles – A dominant disease can be transmitted to offspring if at least one parent suffers from the disease and lives long enough to reproduce –Dominant disease alleles also arise as new mutations in the DNA of eggs or sperm of unaffected parents Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are caused by dominant alleles (continued) – Various mechanisms create an allele’s dominance over the normal allele – Some dominant alleles encode an abnormal protein that interferes with the function of the normal protein – Some dominant alleles encode proteins that carry out toxic reactions – An allele may be dominant if it encodes a protein that is overactive or is active at inappropriate times and places Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are caused by dominant alleles (continued) – Huntington disease is a dominant disorder that causes a slow, progressive deterioration of parts of the brain – The disease results in a loss of coordination, flailing movements, personality disturbances, and eventual death – The disease becomes manifest in adulthood, ensuring its maintenance in the population – The gene encodes for a protein, called huntingtin, of unknown function – Mutant huntington seems both to interfere with the action of normal huntington and to form large aggregates in nerve cells that ultimately kill the cells Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are sex-linked – The X chromosome contains many genes that have no counterpart on the Y chromosome – Because males have only one X chromosome, they have no other allele to exert dominance over a sex-linked (X-linked) allele causing disease –Consequently, sex-linked diseases tend to occur in males Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are sex-linked (continued) – Sex-linked disorders caused by a recessive allele have a unique pattern of inheritance – A son receives his X chromosome from his mother and passes it on only to his daughters, since the gene doesn’t exist on his Y chromosome – Sex-linked genes typically skip generations because the affected male passes the trait to a phenotypically normal carrier daughter, who in turn bears affected sons – Several defective alleles for characteristics encoded on the X chromosome are known, including red-green color blindness and hemophilia Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.10 How Are Human Disorders Caused by Single Genes Inherited? Some human genetic disorders are sex-linked (continued) – Hemophilia is caused by a recessive allele on the X chromosome that results in a deficiency in one of the proteins needed for blood clotting –Hemophiliacs often have anemia owing to blood loss and bruise easily –The hemophilia gene in Queen Victoria of England was passed among the royal families of Europe Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Hemophilia Among the Royal Families of Europe unaffected male hemophiliac male unaffected female carrier female Edward Victoria Duke of Kent Princess of Saxe-Coburg Albert Prince of SaxeCoburg-Gotha Edward VII King of England Victoria Queen of England Alexandra of Denmark Leopold Duke of Albany Helen Louis IV Princess of Grand Duke of Waldeck-Pyrmont Hesse-Darmstadt Alice Princess of Hesse several unaffected chidren Beatrice Henry Prince of Battenburg present British royal family (unaffected) Victoria Elizabeth Alexandra Tsarina Mary carrier daughter and hemophiliac grandson Nicholas II Frederick Ernest Mary Irene of Russia Victoria ? ? ? ? Olga Tatiana Maria Anastasia Alexander Alfonso Albert XII Victoria Leopold Maurice Queen of Spain ? Alexis Tsarevitch Alfonso Crown Prince Juan Beatrice ? Marie Jaime Gonzalo died in infancy Fig. 10-24 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? The incorrect separation of chromosomes or chromatids in meiosis is known as nondisjunction – Nondisjunction causes gametes to have too many and too few chromosomes – Most embryos that arise from fusion of gametes with abnormal chromosome numbers spontaneously abort, but some survive to birth and beyond Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Effects of Nondisjunction during Meiosis Normal meiosis Nondisjunction during meiosis I Nondisjunction during meiosis II Parent cell Meiosis I Meiosis II n n n n n1 n1 n1 n1 n1 n1 n n Fig. 10-25 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes – Nondisjunction of sex chromosomes in males or females produces abnormal numbers of X and Y chromosomes – Nondisjunction of sex chromosomes in males produces sperm with either no sex chromosomes (called “O” sperm), or two sex chromosomes (sperm may be XX, YY, or XY) – Nondisjunction of sex chromosomes in females can produce eggs that are O or XX eggs instead of eggs with one X chromosome Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes (continued) – When normal gametes fuse with these defective sperm or eggs, the zygotes have normal numbers of autosomes but abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes – The most common abnormalities are XO, XXX, XXY, and XYY – Some sex chromosome abnormalities allow affected individuals to survive – The genes on the X chromosome are so essential to survival, any embryo without at least one X chromosome spontaneously aborts very early in development Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes (continued) – Turner syndrome (XO) occurs in females with only one X chromosome – At puberty, hormone deficiencies prevent XO females from menstruating or developing secondary sexual characteristics – Hormone treatment promotes physical development, but because affected women lack mature eggs, they remain infertile – Additional symptoms include short stature, folds of skin around the neck, and increased risk of cardiovascular disease, kidney defects, and hearing loss – Because they have only one X chromosome, women with Turner’s syndrome are more susceptible to recessive disorders such as red-green color blindness and hemophilia Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes (continued) – Trisomy X (XXX) results in a fertile “normal” woman with an extra X chromosome – Most affected women show no abnormal symptoms – There is an increased chance of learning disabilities and a tendency toward tallness associated with trisomy X – By some unknown mechanism that prevents an extra X chromosome from being included in their eggs, women with trisomy X bear normal XX and XY children Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes (continued) – Men with Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) have an extra X chromosome – Most afflicted males show no symptoms, although some may show mixed secondary sexual characteristics, including partial breast development, broadening of the hips, and small testes – XXY men are often infertile because of low sperm count but are not impotent Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Males with Jacob syndrome (XYY) have an extra Y chromosome (XYY) – Men with this malady have high levels of testosterone, tend to develop severe acne, and may be exceptionally tall Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Table 10-2 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of autosomes – Nondisjunction of autosomes can occur during meiosis in the father or mother, resulting in eggs or sperm that are missing an autosome or that have two copies of an autosome – Fusion of these gametes with a normal sperm or egg results in a zygote with one or three copies of the affected autosome – Single-copy autosome embryos usually abort very early in development – Embryos with three copies of an autosome (trisomy) also usually spontaneously abort; however, a small fraction of embryos with three copies of chromosomes 13, 18, or 21 survive to birth – The frequency of nondisjunction increases with the age of the parents Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. 10.11 How Do Errors in Chromosome Number Affect Humans? Some genetic disorders are caused by abnormal numbers of autosomes (continued) – In trisomy 21 (Down syndrome), afflicted individuals have three copies of chromosome 21 – Down syndrome includes several distinctive physical characteristics, including weak muscle tone, a small mouth held partially open because it cannot accommodate the tongue, and distinctively shaped eyelids – Down syndrome is also characterized by low resistance to infectious diseases, heart malformations, and varying degrees of mental retardation, often severe Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc. Trisomy 21, or Down Syndrome Fig. 10-26 Biology: Life on Earth, 9e Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Inc.