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BIO 10 Lecture 11 REPRODUCTION: HUMAN HEREDITY I. Mutants versus Variants • Mutation: A change in the sequence, quantity or location of DNA within the genome that is found in less than 1% of the population – Mutant: An individual who expresses the phenotype associated with a mutation • Variation: A change in the sequence, quantity or location of DNA within the genome that is found in more than 1% of the population – Variant: An individual who expresses the phenotype associated with a variation • Example: A person with sickle cell anemia is a mutant; a person with red hair is a variant II. Types of Mutations 1. Change in a DNA sequence that can lead to a mutant phenotype – E.g. Sickle cell anemia is caused by a single base-pair substitution in the human beta globin gene 2. Change in the quantity of DNA in the genome that can lead to mutant phenotype – E.g. Down Syndrome is caused by an extra copy of human chromosome 21 3. Change in the location of a DNA sequence that can lead to a mutant phenotype – E.g. Muscular dystrophy can be caused by the breakage and relocation of a segment of the human X chromosome III. The 5 Inheritance Patterns of Single Gene Mutations 1. Autosomal recessive – Mutation involves a gene on an autosome (1-22) – Both copies must be mutant for a person to be affected (aa), where “a” is the mutant allele – Usually no bias between males and females – Most common type of inheritance pattern – Is the major risk of inbreeding – Standard pattern: No prior family history – Includes many nasty and fatal childhood diseases: sickle cell anemia, cystic fibrosis, Tay Sachs Example: Sickle-cell anemia • Prevalent in populations in or from areas of the world with high rates of malaria • Red blood cells become distorted into sickle shape, clog capillaries, and cannot efficiently carry oxygen • Mutation is in the gene that codes for the chain polypeptide of the protein hemoglobin. • The mutation causes the substitution of one amino acid, causing the polypeptide chain to coalesce into crystals that distort the red blood cells. • Persons with one “s” allele and one normal S allele do not have the condition, but are called “carriers” because they can pass the gene on to their offspring • ~1 in 12 African Americans are carriers (Ss) • Carriers are protected against malarial infection • Explains high rate of heterozygosity for this mutation in certain populations but not others • It is thought that more humans have died of malaria over the past 100,000 years than any other cause Example: Cystic Fibrosis • Prevalent in Caucasians • 1 in 22 Caucasians in a carrier • Lack of a chloride ion channel in the plasma membrane of epithelial cells causes salt to become trapped within the cells • Water flows into the cells, drying the outside of the cell and making mucous thicker than normal • Biggest problem is in lining of lungs and digestive tract • Thick mucous in lungs is a breeding ground for bacteria • Lungs become full of scar tissue from repeated infections and eventually fail • Slender ducts from gall bladder and other organs delivering digestive enzymes to the small intestine become clogged • Malnutrition used to be a huge problem • Now children with the disorder eat digestive enzymes in pill form with their food • Carriers are protected against fatal dehydration Example: Tay Sachs • Prevalent among Jews of Central European descent • 1 in 30 is a carrier • One of the cruelest of childhood diseases • Babies are normal until about 6 months of age • A relentless decline follows, characterized by progressive deafness, blindness, and loss of the ability to swallow • Most children die by the age of 5 or 6 years • Caused by a lack of the enzyme hexosaminidase A • Catalyzes the degradation of a class of fatty acids called gangliosides • Without the enzyme, gangliosides begin to accumulate in the brain • By about 6 months, enough accumulation for symptoms • No cure • Most Eastern European jews are now tested for being carriers • Rates of the disease have declined dramatically 2. Autosomal dominant – Mutation involves a gene on an autosome (1-22) – Only one copy must be mutant for a person to be affected: (Aa), where “A” in the mutant allele – Often worse if a person has two mutant alleles (AA) – Usually no bias between males and females – Often mild or late onset • Fatal mutations are quickly lost from the population because children with them will die and never pass the mutation on • Only mild or late onset (post-reproductive age onset) can be passed through a family – Examples of mild form: Nail-patella syndrome, polydactyly – Examples of late-onset form: Inherited breast cancer, familial Alzheimer’s Disease, Huntington’s Disease – Second most common inheritance pattern – If a person has an affected parent, he/she has a 50% chance of being affected – Seen in every generation of the family Example: Huntington’s Disease • Late onset neurological disorder (45+) • Mutants pass the mutation on to their children before they know they are affected • Rare; only ~8 people per 100,000 • Caused by a mutation in the Huntingtin gene • Protein aggregates inappropriately in brain cells • Major symptoms: • Uncontrolled movements of the limbs • Rapid neurological decline • Psychosis • No good treatment or cure • DNA testing can identify affected individuals presymptomatically • Only about 3% of “at risk” individuals choose to have the testing • Prefer to live with some hope rather than none Example: Inherited Alzheimer’s Disease • AD can be inherited or sporadic • Characterized by sticky “plaques” in brain tissue • Inherited forms: • • • • Much earlier onset (typically in 30’s – 40’s) More rapid decline (death in 5 years) No good treatments or cure Most “at risk” choose not to be tested • Can be caused by mutations in one of several genes • Example: APP gene on chromosome 21 • Integral membrane protein • If cleaved improperly, secretion of “sticky” degradation product on surface of brain cells • Accumulation damages brain cells • Individuals with Down Syndrome almost always get AD by mid-40’s • Make 1.5 times more APP than normal Example: Inherited Breast Cancer • “Two-hit” hypothesis • Breast cancer caused by loss of both copies of a tumor supressor gene (BRCA-1) in the same breast cell • Mutation rate ~1/100,000 per gene • To lose both copies in a single cell is unlikely: • (10-5) x (10-5) = 1 in 10,000,000,000 • If female comes into life with one copy already mutated • At greater risk because only 1/100,000 chance • Lots more than 100,000 breast cells per breast • Symptoms: • Often many affected female relatives • Earlier onset than most breast cancers (pre-menopause) • Tumors in both breasts • BUT… Prevention possible • DNA testing followed by prophylactic breast removal • Or … mammograms every three months to catch tumors early 3. X-linked recessive – Mutation involves a gene on the X chromosome – In females, both copies must be mutant for her to be affected (Xa Xa) – In males, only one copy must be mutant since males only have one copy of all genes on the X chromosome Xa Y) • Therefore, many more males affected than females • May help account for the fact that the human sex ratio at birth is slightly in favor of males Examples include Duchenne muscular dystrophy, hemophilia, ALD, red-green colorblindness 4. X-linked dominant – Mutation involves a gene on the X chromosome – Only one copy of the gene must be mutated for a female to be affected (XA Xa); Males who inherit the allele are always affected and may even die (XA Y) – More common in females than in males • Females can get it from Mom or Dad, males only from Mom • In some cases, males do not survive embryogenesis Example: Hypertrichosis • Excessive hairiness • If mother is affected, half her sons and half her daughters are affected • If father is affected, ALL his daughters (but none of his sons) will be affected 5. Y-linked – Mutation involves one of the few genes located on the Y chromosome – Always dominant since can never be observed in the recessive state – Is always passed from father to son, never from mother to son – Never seen in females – Rare, since there are so few genes of the Y chromosome – Examples include: Male infertility, hairy ears, faulty tooth enamel IV. Pedigree Analysis Two Sample Pedigree Problems: • Gabby and Ted already have two children with CF • What is the probability that their next child will have CF? • Andy has a brother with CF but does not know if he is a carrier • Andy’ wife, Ann, knows she is a carrier for CF • What is the probability that Andy and Ann’s first child will have CF? V. Chromosome Mutations 1. Polyploidy – Aberrations in the number of chromosome sets (1 set, 2 sets, 3 sets, etc.) – Animals and many plants are diploid (have two of each chromosome). – Sometimes organisms are formed with more than this diploid set and are called polyploid. – Although lethal for humans, polyploid plants may be more robust (many crop species are polyploid, like wheat) • Most common cause of human polyploidy is dispermic fertilization • Triploid fetuses have 69 chromosomes (3 sets of 23) • Aneuploidy – Incorrect chromosome number. – Usually involves one missing or extra chromosome (e.g. 3 copies of 21) – Members of the same species almost always have the same number of chromosomes. – Exceptions with fewer or more than the normal number commonly occur (5 percent of human pregnancies), but are usually lethal – Aneuploidy is caused by non-disjunction—failure of homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids to separate during meiosis, creating sperm or eggs with more or less than the normal 23 chromosomes Non-Disjunction Example: Down syndrome, Trisomy 21 • Most common form of aneuploidy in human births (0.1 percent of all live births). • Ninety-five percent are caused by trisomy 21. • Phenotype—small, oval head; lower-thannormal IQ; short stature; reduced life span; and infertility in males. • Most trisomy 21 is result of non-disjunction during egg formation; only 10 percent during sperm formation. Detected by karyotype analysis. • Frequency of non-disjunction (and Down syndrome) increases with age of the mother. – Example: Edwards Syndrome (Trisomy 18) VERY, VERY sick babies! Most do not make it to term Average life span 4 months – Example: Patau Syndrome (Trisomy 13) Also, VERY, VERY sick babies! Most do not make it to term Average life span also ~4 months • Sex Chromosome Aneuploidies – Examples. • Turner Syndrome – Sterile females with XO – Shield chest – Short – Neck webbing • Klinefelter Syndrome – Sterile males with XXY Why are Sex Chromosome Aneuploides more Viable than those of the Autosomes? • Female mammals inactivate one of their X chromosomes in each cell – Occurs at day 16 of embryogenesis in humans – Each cell makes its choice independently – Once the cell has made its choice, all its mitotic daughter cells maintain that same X inactivated – Is a way of equalizing gene dosage between males and females • XXY males also inactivate one of the X chromosomes • XO females and normal males (XY) do not inactivate their X since they have only one • Tortoise Shell Cats – Are almost always female – Have a coat color gene located on the X chromosome • O = orange, o = black – During early embryogenesis, each cell inactivates one of these and then mitotically divides to produce a cell lineage with the same X inactivated – In the adult cat, leads to a splotchy phenotype of orange and black patches Each cat has a unique splotchy pattern because the developmental decisions by each cell will be different in each embryo Rare tortoise shell male = XXY Klinefelter kitty!! Short Review of Lecture 11 • What is the difference between a mutant and a variant? • What are the different types of mutations? • What are the 5 different possible inheritance patterns for diseases under the control of a single gene? • What is the difference between polyploidy and aneuploidy? Which is more viable in humans? • What are some examples of human aneuploidies involving numbered chromosomes? Sex chromosomes? • Why are aneuploides of sex chromosomes better tolerated in mammals than those of autosomes?