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Asexual Reproduction     Vegetative propagation Binary Fission Budding Sporogenesis Chromosomes and Inheritance Chapter 15 Meiosis    Oogenisis Spermatogenisis http://highered.mcgrawhill.com/olcweb/cgi/pluginpop.cgi?it=swf::53 5::535::/sites/dl/free/0072437316/120074/bio 19.swf::Stages%20of%20Meiosis Chromosome Theory of Inheritance  Mendelian genes have specific loci along chromosomes, and it’s the chromosomes that undergo segregation and independent assortment. Thomas Hunt Morgan   First to associate a specific gene with a specific chromosome Drosophila melanogaster = fruit fly Fruit Flies  Wild type = normal character phenotype Mutant = alternative traits  Morgan’s cross:     White-eyed male with a Red-eyed female All the F1 offspring had red eyes What would you conclude?  The red allele is dominant to the white allele But then…    Crosses between F1 offspring produced 3:1 phenotypic ratio in F2 offspring The white-eyed trait appeared only in males Morgan concluded that a fly’s eye color was linked to its sex sex-linked gene The gene with the white-eyed mutation is on the X chromosome linked genes  Tend to be inherited together  the chromosome is passed along as a unit Genetic recombination  Offspring with new combinations of traits inherited from two parents  Result from:   independent assortment of genes located on nonhomologous chromosomes crossing over of genes located on homologous chromosomes SRY Gene   Anatomical signs of sex first appear when the embryo is about 2 months old Presence of SRY gene - sex determining region of the Y chromosome)  generic embryonic gonads are modified into testes Sex Linked Genes Heterozygous females will be carriers Any male receiving the recessive allele from his mother will express the trait Examples  Duchenne muscular dystrophy    Absence of an X-linked gene for a key muscle protein, called dystrophin Characterized by a progressive weakening of the muscles and loss of coordination Hemophilia   Absence of one or more clotting factors Prolonged bleeding because clots form slowly Barr body   During female development, one X chromosome per cell condenses into a compact barr body This inactivates most of its genes   Reactivated in ovarian cells that produce ova Females consist of a mosaic of cells   some with an active paternal X others with an active maternal X Alfred Sturtevant  Chromosome map   Constructed using crossing over of linked genes Ordered list of the genetic loci along a particular chromosome body color and wing shape are usually inherited together because their genes are on the same chromosome linkage map   used recombination frequencies from fruit fly crosses to map the relative position of genes along chromosomes frequency of recombinant offspring reflected the distances between genes on a chromosome Genetic recombination    Parental types = phenotypes that match the original parents Recombinants = new combination of parental traits dihybrid cross  combination of traits that did not match either parent  crosses between hybrid plants produces four phenotypes map units  One map unit is equivalent to a 1% recombination frequency map units   Some genes on a chromosome are so far apart that a crossover between them is virtually certain. In this case, the frequency of recombination reaches is its maximum value of 50%  the genes act as if found on separate chromosomes and are inherited independently Nondisjunction  Problems with the meiotic spindle cause errors in daughter cells Aneuploidy  Trisomic cells  three copies of a particular chromosome type   2n + 1 total chromosomes Monosomic cells  only one copy of a particular chromosome type  2n - 1 chromosomes Polyploidy   Organisms with more than two complete sets of chromosomes Relatively common among plants and much less common among animals  fishes and amphibians have polyploid species Aneuploidy vs. Polypoidy  One extra or missing chromosome upsets the genetic balance during development more than does an entire extra set of chromosomes changes in chromosome structure   deletion  a chromosome fragment lacking a centromere is lost during cell division duplication  a fragment becomes attached as an extra segment to a sister chromatid changes in chromosome structure   inversion  a chromosomal fragment reattaches to the original chromosome in the reverse orientation translocation  a chromosomal fragment joins a nonhomologous chromosome Outcome  Most of these alterations are so disastrous that the embryos are spontaneously aborted long before birth Down syndrome   3 copies of chromosome 21 affects 1 in 700 children born in the US Sex Chromosome Disorders  Klinefelter’s syndrome     XXY male Occurs 1 in every 2000 live births have male sex organs, but are sterile Turner’s syndrome    XO female (monosomy) occurs 1 in every 5000 births produces phenotypic, but immature females Genomic Imprinting   A gene on one homologous chromosome is silenced, while its allele on the homologous chromosome is expressed Depends on whether the gene resides in a female or a male Genomic Imprinting The same alleles may have different effects on offspring, depending on whether they arrive in the zygote via the ovum or via the sperm