* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download THE CHROMOSOMAL BASIS OF INHERITANCE
Heritability of IQ wikipedia , lookup
Oncogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Essential gene wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Genetic testing wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of neurodegenerative diseases wikipedia , lookup
Medical genetics wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Cell-free fetal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Public health genomics wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Ridge (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
Down syndrome wikipedia , lookup
Skewed X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup
Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Genomic imprinting wikipedia , lookup
Y chromosome wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Neocentromere wikipedia , lookup
THE CHROMOSOMAL BASIS OF INHERITANCE CHAPTER 15 Chromosome theory of inheritance: • Genes have specific locations (loci) on chromosomes • Chromosomes segregate and assort independently Chromosomes tagged to reveal a specific gene (yellow). Thomas Hunt Morgan – Columbia University 1910 | 1933 • Drosophila melanogaster – fruit fly – 4 pairs of chromosomes – Fast breeding: 2 week generations – Sex chromosome: Females = XX Males = XY • Sex-linked gene: located on X or Y chromosome – Red-eyes = wild-type; white-eyes = mutant – Specific gene carried on specific chromosome (only F2 males = mutant) Classes of chromosomes autosomal chromosomes sex chromosomes Sex determination varies between animals Genes on sex chromosomes • Y chromosome – few genes other than SRY • sex-determining region • master regulator for maleness • turns on genes for production of male hormones – many effects = pleiotropy! • X chromosome – other genes/traits beyond sex determination • mutations: – Hemophilia – Duchenne muscular dystrophy – Color-blindness Map of Human Y chromosome? < 30 genes on Y chromosome Yellow = heterochromatin Human development • • • • Y chromosome required for development of testes Embryo gonads indifferent at 2 months SRY gene: sex-determining region of Y Codes for protein that regulates other genes Human X chromosome • Sex-linked – usually means “X-linked” – more than 60 diseases traced to genes on X chromosome Ichthyosis, X-linked Placental steroid sulfatase deficiency Kallmann syndrome Chondrodysplasia punctata, X-linked recessive Duchenne muscular dystrophy Becker muscular dystrophy Chronic granulomatous disease Retinitis pigmentosa-3 Norrie disease Retinitis pigmentosa-2 Hypophosphatemia Aicardi syndrome Hypomagnesemia, X-linked Ocular albinism Retinoschisis Adrenal hypoplasia Glycerol kinase deficiency Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency Incontinentia pigmenti Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome Menkes syndrome Androgen insensitivity Sideroblastic anemia Aarskog-Scott syndrome PGK deficiency hemolytic anemia Anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia Agammaglobulinemia Kennedy disease Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease Alport syndrome Fabry disease Immunodeficiency, X-linked, with hyper IgM Lymphoproliferative syndrome Albinism-deafness syndrome Fragile-X syndrome Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy Choroideremia Cleft palate, X-linked Spastic paraplegia, X-linked, uncomplicated Deafness with stapes fixation PRPS-related gout Lowe syndrome Lesch-Nyhan syndrome HPRT-related gout Hunter syndrome Hemophilia B Hemophilia A G6PD deficiency: favism Drug-sensitive anemia Chronic hemolytic anemia Manic-depressive illness, X-linked Colorblindness, (several forms) Dyskeratosis congenita TKCR syndrome Adrenoleukodystrophy Adrenomyeloneuropathy Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy Diabetes insipidus, renal Myotubular myopathy, X-linked Sex-linked genes • Sex-linked gene on X or Y • Females (XX), male (XY) – Eggs = X, sperm = X or Y • Fathers pass X-linked genes to daughters, but not sons • Males express recessive trait on the single X (hemizygous) • Females can be affected or carriers Transmission of sex-linked recessive traits Hemophilia sex-linked recessive H Xh x X HY HH XHh XH female / eggs male / sperm XH XH Y XH XH XH Y XH Xh Xh XH Xh XH Xh XhY carrier disease XHY Y Mendelian Inheritance in Humans Pedigree: diagram that shows the relationship between parents/offspring across 2+ generations Woman = Man = Trait expressed: Pedigree Analysis X-inactivation • Female mammals inherit 2 X chromosomes – one X becomes inactivated during embryonic development • condenses into compact object = Barr body • which X becomes Barr body is random – patchwork trait = “mosaic” XH XH X h Xh X-inactivation & tortoise shell cat • 2 different cell lines in cat Genetic Recombination: production of offspring with new combo of genes from parents • If offspring look like parents parental types • If different from parents recombinants • If results do not follow Mendel’s Law of Independent Assortment, then the genes are probably linked Linked genes: located on same chromosome and tend to be inherited together during cell division Crossing over: explains why some linked genes get separated during meiosis • the further apart 2 genes on same chromosome, the higher the probability of crossing over and the higher the recombination frequency Calculating recombination frequency Linkage Map: genetic map that is based on % of cross-over events • 1 map unit = 1% recombination frequency • Express relative distances along chromosome • 50% recombination = far apart on same chromosome or on 2 different chromosomes Exceptions to Mendelian Inheritance Genomic Imprinting • Genomic imprinting: phenotypic effect of gene depends on whether it came from the M or F parent • Methylation: silence genes by adding methyl groups to DNA Non-Nuclear DNA • Some genes located in organelles – Mitochondria, chloroplasts, plastids – Contain small circular DNA • Mitochondria = maternal inheritance (eggs) Variegated (striped or spotted) leaves result from mutations in pigment genes in plastids, which generally are inherited from the maternal parent. Genetic Testing Reasons for Genetic Tests: • Diagnostic testing (genetic disorders) • Presymptomatic & predictive testing • Carrier testing (before having children) • Pharmacogenetics (medication & dosage) • Prenatal testing • Newborn screening • Preimplantation testing (embryos) Prenatal Testing • May be used on a fetus to detect genetic disorders • Amniocentesis: remove amniotic fluid around fetus to culture for karyotype • Chorionic villus sampling: insert narrow tube in cervix to extract sample of placenta with fetal cells for karyotype Nondisjunction: chromosomes fail to separate properly in Meiosis I or Meiosis II Karyotyping can detect nondisjunctions. Down Syndrome = Trisomy 21 Nondisjunction Klinefelter Syndrome: 47XYY, 47XXY Nondisjunction Turner Syndrome = 45XO Nondisjunction • Aneuploidy: incorrect # chromosomes – Monosomy (1 copy) or Trisomy (3 copies) • Polyploidy: 2+ complete sets of chromosomes; 3n or 4n – Rare in animals, frequent in plants A tetraploid mammal. Scientists think this species may have arisen when an ancestor doubled its chromosome # by errors in mitosis or meiosis. Chromosomal Mutations Chromosomal Mutations