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Biological Anthropology Ways in Which We Differ (and why that can matter) Red Blood Cells App. 30 trillion RBC in the human body you are both destroying (and making) new red blood cells at a rate of around 2.7 million cells per second. Every red blood cell contains about 270 million hemoglobin molecules, each one capable of carrying four oxygen molecules Let’s Start Outside? ABO Blood Group Alleles A B O Genotype codominant recessive AA, AO BB, BO OO AB Phenotype A B O AB ABO Differences Rh (Rhesus) Blood Group Alleles Genotype Phenotype D dominant DD, Dd Rh+ d recessive dd Rh- Maternal/Infant Rh Incompatibility Now Let’s Go Inside… Red Blood Cells App. 30 trillion RBC in the human body you are both destroying (and making) new red blood cells at a rate of around 2.7 million cells per second. Every red blood cell contains about 270 million hemoglobin molecules, each one capable of carrying four oxygen molecules Two Forms of Beta Hemoglobin • Normal Hemoglobin (A) • Mutated Hemoglobin (S) Beta Hemoglobin • Protein consists of 146 amino acids • Gene consists of 438 bases (146 X 3) • Protein comes in two forms The “Normal” Situation (HbA allele) DNA: Codon GGA CTC CTC TTT #5 Amino Acid #6 #6 #7 Glutamic Acid #8 The “Mutated” Situation (HbS allele) DNA: Codon GGA CAC CTC TTT #5 Amino Acid #6 #6 Valine #7 #8 The Difference is in Codon #6 Normal allele: CTC Normal A.A.: Glutamic Acid Mutated allele: CAC Substituted A.A.: Valine Everything else is the same: 145 identical amino acids 437 identical DNA bases Sickle-Cell Alleles Genotype Phenotype HbA dominant HbA HbA normal HbS recessive HbA HbS sickle-cell trait HbS HbS sickle-cell anemia Red Blood Cells ‘donut’ shaped sickle shaped A simple mutation with multiple effects Sickle-Cell in the U.S. • Sickle cell anemia is the most common inherited blood disorder in the US • About 8% of African Americans are carriers of sickle cell disease • More than 70,000 people have sickle cell disease • Two million people have sickle cell trait • Sickle cell disease occurs in 1 in every 500 African Americans • Approximately 1 in 12 African Americans has sickle cell trait Balanced Polymorphism Situation in which selection maintains two or more phenotypes for a specific gene Heterozygote Advantage What advantage could sickle-cell offer? Malaria • Infectious disease caused by • Falciparum plasmodium • Mosquito is carrier Malaria • perhaps the most deadly organism in the world (to humans) • 300-500 million people in the world • 1-1.5 million people die each year Malaria • Parasite infects blood • Part of life cycle occurs in red blood cells • Population continuously infected Distribution of Malaria Distribution of the HbS allele The Connection • Heterozygote has greatest fitness in malarial environment • Both high in frequency Viruses • Not alive • Require host cell to reproduce • Symptoms and effects relate to which host cells are used Viruses • Viruses use the cells genetic machinery to make new copies Influenza A Virus •Highly variable surface structures •Mutates readily •Avoidance behaviors frequent handwashing covering coughs having ill persons stay home, (except to seek medical care) minimize contact with others in the household who may be ill with swine-origin influenza virus. Model of the influenza A virus showing HA and NA receptors projecting from the surface of the virus. Source: http://www.udel.edu/chem/white/C647/FluVirus.GIF; accessed May 5, 2009. H1N1 Virus H1N1 Virus A “triple reassortment” virus consisting of human, avian, and swine influenzas Virus strains 90% identical to H1N1 have been circulating in swine for approximately 10 years Combination of viral strains thought to have arisen when live pigs were transported between North America and Eurasia Source: http://www.gate2biotech.com/originsof-the-swine-flu-virus/; accessed on 24 Nov. 2009 HIV Virus • HIV uses T-cells as hosts • T-cells are part of the body’s immune system • Infection can lead to AIDS From HIV to AIDS • HIV+ – exposure to virus and antibody production • CD4 (t-cell) count drops after infection, rebounds, then diminishes • ≤ 200 = “AIDS” – Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome A global view of HIV infection 33 million people [30–36 million] living with HIV, 2007 2.2 Ebola Zaire Electron micrograph of Zaire Ebola virus. This is the first photo ever taken, on 10/13/1976 by Dr. F.A. Murphy, now at UC Davis, then at CDC. Diagnostic specimen in cell culture at 160,000 x magnification. Ebola Zaire Majority of cases are lethal The virus’ genome consists of 18,959 nucleotide bases Animal Source? Cumulative reported cases in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone provided in WHO situation reports beginning on March 24, 2014 through the most recent situation report on April 22, 2015. Source: http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/cumulative-cases-graphs.html; accessed 30/04/2015 Current Ebola Epidemic (as of 28 April 2015) Country Total Cases (Suspected, Probable, and Confirmed) LaboratoryConfirmed Cases Total Deaths Countries with Widespread Transmission Guinea 3584 3158 2377 Liberia* 10322 3151 4608 Sierra Leone 12371 8586 3899 Total 26277 14895 10884 Source: http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/casecounts.html, accessed 30 April 2015 Current Ebola Epidemic (as of 28 April 2015) Total Cases (Suspected, Probable, and Confirmed) LaboratoryConfirmed Cases Total Deaths Nigeria 20 19 8 Senegal 1 1 0 Spain 1 1 0 United States 4 4 1 Mali 8 7 6 United Kingdom 1 1 0 Total 35 33 15 Country Previously Affected Countries** Source: http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/casecounts.html, accessed 30 April 2015