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Chapter 14 Chromosomes and Human Inheritance Albia Dugger • Miami Dade College 14.1 Shades of Skin • Variations in skin color may have evolved as a balance between vitamin D production and UV protection • More than 100 gene products are involved in the synthesis of melanin, and the formation and deposition of melanosomes • Mutations in some of these genes may have contributed to regional variations in human skin color Variation in Human Skin Color 14.1 Human Chromosomes • Geneticists study inheritance patterns in humans by tracking genetic disorders and abnormalities through families • Charting genetic connections with pedigrees reveals inheritance patterns of certain traits Pedigrees • Inheritance patterns in humans are typically studied by tracking observable traits in families over generations • A standardized chart of genetic connections (pedigree) is used to determine the probability that future offspring will be affected by a genetic abnormality or disorder • Pedigree analyses also reveals whether a trait is associated with a dominant or recessive allele, and whether the allele is on an autosome or a sex chromosome Standard Symbols Used in Pedigrees male female marriage/mating offspring individual showing trait being studied sex not specified generation Polydactyly A Pedigree for Polydactyly A Pedigree for Huntington’s Disease Genetic Abnormalities and Disorders • A genetic abnormality is an uncommon version of a trait that is not inherently life-threatening, • A genetic disorder causes medical problems that may be severe • A genetic disorder is often characterized by a specific set of symptoms (a syndrome) Types of Genetic Variation • Single genes on autosomes or sex chromosomes govern more than 6,000 genetic abnormalities • Most human traits, including skin color, are polygenic (influenced by multiple genes) and some have epigenetic contributions or causes Patterns of Inheritance • Based on variations in single genes (Mendelian patterns) • Autosomal dominant • Autosomal recessive • X-linked recessive • X-linked dominant • Based on variations in whole chromosomes • Changes in chromosome number • Changes in chromosome structure Table 14-1 p221 Table 14-1 p221 Table 14-1 p221 Table 14-1 p221 Recurring Genetic Disorders • Mutations that cause genetic disorders are rare and put their bearers at risk • Such mutations survive in populations for several reasons • Reintroduction by new mutations • Recessive alleles are masked in heterozygotes • Heterozygotes may have an advantage in a specific environment Take-Home Message: How do we study inheritance patterns in humans? • Inheritance patterns in humans are often studied by tracking traits through generations of families • A genetic abnormality is a rare version of an inherited trait; a genetic disorder is an inherited condition that causes medical problems • Some human genetic traits are governed by a single gene and inherited in a Mendelian fashion; many others are influenced by multiple genes and epigenetics ANIMATED FIGURE: Pedigree diagrams To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE 14.3 Autosomal Inheritance Patterns • An allele is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern if the trait it specifies appears in heterozygous people • An allele is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern if the trait it specifies appears only in homozygous people Autosomal Dominant Inheritance • A dominant autosomal allele is expressed in homozygotes and heterozygotes • Tends to appear in every generation • With one homozygous recessive and one heterozygous parent, children have a 50% chance of inheriting and displaying the trait • Examples: • Achondroplasia • Huntington’s disease • Hutchinson–Gilford progeria normal mother affected father meiosis and gamete formation affected child normal child disorder-causing allele (dominant) Stepped Art Figure 14-3a p222 Figure 14-3b p222 Figure 14-3c p222 Autosomal Recessive Inheritance • Autosomal recessive alleles are expressed only in homozygotes • Heterozygotes are carriers and do not have the trait • A child of two carriers has a 25% chance of expressing the trait • Examples: • Albinism • Tay-Sachs didease carrier mother carrier father meiosis and gamete formation affected child carrier child normal child disorder-causing allele (recessive) Stepped Art Figure 14-4a p223 Figure 14-4b p223 INTERACTION: Autosomal-dominant inheritance To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE INTERACTION: Autosomal-recessive inheritance To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Take-Home Message: How do we know a trait is associated with an allele on an autosome? • With an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern, persons heterozygous for an allele have the associated trait; the trait appears in every generation • With an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern, only persons who are homozygous for an allele have the associated trait, which can skip generations 12.4 Examples of X-Linked Inheritance • Traits associated with recessive alleles on the X chromosome appear more frequently in men than in women • A man cannot pass an X chromosome allele to a son • Mutated alleles on the X chromosome cause or contribute to over 300 genetic disorders X-Linked Recessive Pattern • More males than females have X-linked recessive genetic disorders • Males have only one X chromosome and can express a single recessive allele • A female heterozygote has two X chromosomes and may not show symptoms • Males transmit an X only to their daughters, not to their sons carrier mother normal father meiosis and gamete formation normal daughter or son carrier daughter affected son recessive allele on X chromosome Stepped Art Figure 14-6a1 p224 Some X-Linked Recessive Disorders • Red-green color blindness • Inability to distinguish certain colors caused by altered photoreceptors in the eyes • Duchenne muscular dystrophy • Degeneration of muscles caused by lack of the structural protein dystrophin • Hemophilia A • Bleeding caused by lack of blood-clotting protein Figure 14-6b1 p224 You may have one form of red–green color blindness if you see a 7 in this circle instead of a 29. You may have another form of red– green color blindness if you see a 3 instead of an 8 in this circle. Figure 14-6c1 p224 INTERACTION: X-linked inheritance To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Hemophilia A in Descendents of Queen Victoria of England Take-Home Message: Is a trait associated with an allele on an X chromosome? • Men who have an X-linked recessive allele have the trait associated with the allele; heterozygous women do not, they have a normal allele on their second X chromosome – the trait appears more often in men • Men transmit an X-linked allele to their daughters, but not to their sons 14.5 Heritable Changes in Chromosome Structure • On rare occasions, a chromosome’s structure changes; such changes are usually harmful or lethal, rarely neutral or beneficial • A segment of a chromosome may be duplicated, deleted, inverted, or translocated Duplication • DNA sequences that are repeated two or more times • Duplication may be caused by unequal crossovers in prophase Deletion • Loss of some portion of a chromosome • Usually causes serious or lethal disorders • Example: Cri-du-chat Inversion • Part of the sequence of DNA becomes oriented in the reverse direction, with no molecular loss Translocation • If a chromosome breaks, the broken part may get attached to a different chromosome, or to a different part of the same one • Most translocations are reciprocal, or balanced, which means that two chromosomes exchange broken parts • A reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 8 and 14 is the usual cause of Burkitt’s lymphoma Translocation D With a translocation, a broken piece of a chromosome gets reattached in the wrong place. This example shows a reciprocal translocation, in which two chromosomes exchange chunks. Chromosome Changes in Evolution • Changes in chromosome structure can reduce fertility in heterozygotes; but accumulation of multiple changes in homozygotes may result in new species • Certain duplications may allow one copy of a gene to mutate while the other carries out its original function • Example: X and Y chromosomes were once homologous autosomes in reptile-like ancestors of mammals Evolution of X and Y Chromosomes from Homologous Autosomes (autosome pair) Ancestral reptiles >350 mya Figure 14-9a p227 Y X SRY Ancestral reptiles 350 mya Figure 14-9b p227 Y X area that cannot cross over Monotremes 320–240 mya Figure 14-9c p227 Y X Marsupials 170–130 mya Y X Monkeys 130–80 mya Y X Humans 50– 30 mya Figure 14-9d p227 Differences Among Closely Related Organisms • Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes; chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans have 24 telomere sequence • Two chromosomes fused end-to-end human chimpanzee Take-Home Message: Does chromosome structure change? • A segment of a chromosome may be duplicated, deleted, inverted, or translocated • Such a change is usually harmful or lethal, but may be conserved in the rare circumstance that it has a neutral or beneficial effect ANIMATION: Deletion To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE ANIMATION: Duplication To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE ANIMATION: Translocation To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE 14.6 Heritable Changes in Chromosome Number • Occasionally, abnormal events occur before or during meiosis, and new individuals end up with the wrong chromosome number • Consequences range from minor to lethal changes in form and function Polyploidy and Aneuploidy • Many flowering plant species, and some insects, fishes, and other animals, are polyploid – they have three or more complete sets of chromosomes • Trisomy and monosomy are examples of aneuploidy, in which an individual’s cells have too many or too few copies of a chromosome Nondisjunction • Changes in chromosome number can be caused by nondisjunction, when a pair of chromosomes fails to separate properly during mitosis or meiosis • Affects the chromosome number at fertilization • Monosomy (n-1 gamete) • Trisomy (n+1 gamete) Nondisjunction Metaphase I Anaphase I Telophase I Metaphase II Anaphase II Telophase II Stepped Art Autosomal Change and Down Syndrome • Only trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) allows survival to adulthood • Characteristics include physical appearance, mental impairment, and heart defects • Incidence of nondisjunction increases with maternal age • Can be detected through prenatal diagnosis Trisomy 21: Genotype Trisomy 21: Phenotype Change in Sex Chromosome Number • Changes in sex chromosome number may impair learning or motor skills, or be undetected • Female sex chromosome abnormalities • Turner syndrome (XO) • XXX syndrome (three or more X chromosomes) • Male sex chromosome abnormalities • Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) • XYY syndrome Take-Home Message: What are the effects of chromosome number changes? • Nondisjunction can change the number of autosomes or sex chromosomes in gametes; such changes usually cause genetic disorders in offspring • Sex chromosome abnormalities are usually associated with some degree of learning difficulty and motor skill impairment ANIMATION: Sources of genotype variation To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE 14.7 Genetic Screening • Our understanding of human inheritance can provide prospective parents with information about the health of their future children Detecting Genetic Disorders • Surgery, prescription drugs, hormone replacement therapy, and dietary controls can minimize and in some cases eliminate the symptoms of a genetic disorder • Some disorders can be detected early enough to start countermeasures before symptoms develop • Example: Most hospitals in the United States now screen newborns for mutations that cause phenylketonuria (PKU) Family Planning • Couples may choose to know if their future children face a high risk of inheriting a severe genetic disorder • Genetic analysis starts with parental karyotypes, pedigrees, and genetic testing for known disorders • Information is used to predict the probability of having a child with a genetic disorder Prenatal Diagnosis • In prenatal diagnosis, an embryo or fetus is tested before birth to screen for sex or genetic problems • Noninvasive techniques include obstetric sonography • Invasive procedures in which samples of tissue or blood are taken involve risks to mother and fetus • Fetoscopy • Amniocentesis • Chorionic villus sampling (CVS) Ultrasound Conventional ultrasound 4D ultrasound Fetoscopy Fetoscopy amniotic sac chorion Figure 14-14 p230 Preimplantation Diagnosis • Couples at high risk of having a child with a genetic disorder may choose in vitro fertilization for preimplantation diagnosis • An undifferentiated cell is removed from the early embryo and its genes are examined before implantation • If the embryo has no detectable genetic defects, it is inserted into the mother’s uterus to continue developing Embryo After 3 Mitotic Divisions Take-Home Message: How do we use what we know about human inheritance? • Genetic testing can provide prospective parents with information about the health of their future children