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Announcements -First midterm exam will be in this room on Friday (4-25) from 10:30AM-12:20PM -Exam will cover material presented in lecture and quiz section through the end of last week, however… -this weeks material will reinforce some of the previous concepts you have learned -this weeks material WILL be covered on the next midterm exam Leo Pallanck’s office hours: Friday afternoons by appointment ([email protected]) What this course is about From Lecture 1 Inheritance how is genetic information read within cells? how are traits transmitted to progeny? how are unique physical traits determined by genes? Mutant analysis how are biological processes studied by analyzing Today mutants? Genomics what can we learn by studying whole genomes? Throughout the quarter . . . how and why are model organisms used in genetics? how does that information apply to humans? More to come! Mutant analysis (AKA Genetic Analysis) The use of mutants to understand how a biological process normally works* Very powerful - can be used to study metabolic pathways, animal development, neurobiology, cell division, etc. A simple analogy… *See the Salvation of Doug article at the following site: http://bio.research.ucsc.edu/people/sullivan/savedoug.html Analysis of pizza synthesis Analagous to genes Analysis of pizza synthesis Analagous to a mutation Analagous to genes The mutant phenotype No red sauce?! Mutant analysis involves model organisms What is a model organism? A species that one can experiment with to ask a biological question Why bother with model organisms? - All organisms are related at the molecular level - Not always possible to do experiments on the organism you want - If the basic biology is similar, it may make sense to study a simple organism rather than a complex one Which of these cameras do you think would be easier to understand? IMAX 3-D camera Box camera Features of a good model organism • Short generation time • Small, easy to maintain • Large numbers of progeny • Well-studied life cycle, biology • Appropriate for theorganism—the question at hand • Mendel used a model garden pea - relatively short generation time—one per year - lots of progeny per cross - self-pollination and out-crossing possible Telomeres - true-breeding varieties readily available from local merchant 96 million telomeres per cell! Some commonly used model organisms - Bacteria — Escherichia coli - Budding yeast — Saccharomyces cerevisiae - Fruit fly — Drosophila melanogaster QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this pict ure. - Nematode — Caenorhabditis elegans - Mouse — Mus musculus Quiz Section this week: Complementation analysis of yeast mutants An introduction to yeast . . . Yeast as a model “genetic” organism Budding yeast—a single-celled fungus that divides by budding Yeast cells can exist as haploids… Mutagenesis is easier in single-cell organisms with haploid lifestyles Haploid life cycle: mitosis The haploid life cycle (1n) cytokinesis mutation The life cycle of “budding” yeast Yeast cells can also exist as diploids… 1n a haploid a haploid mating The haploid life cycle (1n) diploid zygote The life cycle of “budding” yeast (cont) Mendelian segregation occurs here A tetrad with 4 haploid spores meiosis (“gametes”) 2 a cells 1n 2 a cells a/a diploid life cycle (2n) Conducting a mutant analysis with yeast Case study: analyzing the adenine biosynthetic pathway by generating and studying “ade” mutants Wild-type yeast can survive on ammonia, a few vitamins, a few mineral salts, some trace elements and sugar… They synthesize everything else they need, including adenine What genes does yeast need to synthesize adenine? (Why might we care about adenine?) Identifying yeast mutants that require adenine Treat wt haploid cells with a mutagen: plate cells Adeninerequiring colonies (ade mutants) “complete” plate -adenine plate m3 m2 “Replica-plating” m1 sterile piece of velvet Are the adenine-requiring mutants recessive? That is, are they LOF mutations? Why do we care? “a” mating type m1 “a” mating type wild-type Genotypes: ade ADE diploids “complete” plate What do you conclude? replica-plate using velvet -adenine plate ADE is dominant over ade Are all of the mutations in one gene? Are m1 and m2 alleles of the same gene? What would you predict if… • only one enzyme is needed for synthesis of adenine? All mutants would be alleles of the same gene. • many enzymes are needed for synthesis of adenine? Different genes might be mutant. How to find out how many different genes we have mutated? Do complementation test to ask: are the mutations alleles of the same gene or of different genes? Performing a complementation test “a” mating type “a” mating type m1 m2 diploids replica-plate “complete” 4 -adenine Do m1 and m2 complement, or fail to complement? Are m1 and m2 alleles of the same gene, or alleles of different genes? Complementation tests with ade mutants What do you conclude from the pair-wise crosses shown below? x m m 1o 1 m 2 m 3 m 4 m 5 m 6 m 7 m 2 + m 3 + m 4 + m 5 o m 6 + m 7 o o Conclusion? m1, m5, m7 are mutations in one gene o o o o o o = no growth on -ade + = growth on -ade Complementation tests with ade mutants What do you conclude from the pair-wise crosses shown below? Four complementation groups x m m 1o 1 m 2 m 3 m 4 m 5 m 6 m 7 Usually means four genes Conclusion? m m 2 m 3 m 4 m 5 m 6 o + o + + + o + + + + m2, m4 are in one gene o + + + m3 o + o m6 o + + + + o + 7 o o m1, m5, m7 are mutations in one gene o = no growth on -ade + = growth on -ade Practice Question Yeast cells can normally grow on a sugar called galactose as the sole carbon source. Seven mutant “a” haploid yeast strains have been isolated that are unable to grow on galactose (“gal”) plates. Six of these mutant strains were each cross-stamped on a gal plate with a wild type “a” strain. The resulting pattern of growth on the gal plates is depicted below (shading = growth). In all plates, the wild type strain is in the horizontal streak. On the leftmost plate, mark the location of the a/a diploid with a circle. What is the mode of inheritance of mutant phenotype in mutants 1-6? How can you tell? Diploids grow on gal plate… so, wild type is dominant Practice question (continued) Each of the seven “a” mutant strains was cross-stamped on gal plates against “a” versions of the seven mutants. The results are depicted below: Mutant 1 Mutant 1 Mutant 2 Mutant 3 Mutant 4 Mutant 2 Mutant 3 Mutant 4 Mutant 5 Mutant 6 Mutant 7 m1, m2, m5 m3, m6 m4 Mutant 5 Mutant 6 Mutant 7 Looking just at mutants 1–6 for now… group these six mutants by complementation group. Practice question (continued) Now consider mutant 7. What is surprising about the result in the complementation table? Fails to complement any of the others… how could it be an allele of 3 different genes? Mutant 7 was cross-stamped on gal plate with wild type as you saw with the other six mutants earlier: What do you conclude about the mode of inheritance of mutant 7? How does that help you explain the complementation test result for mutant 7? Complementation test fails with a dominant mutation… heterozygote will always show the mutant phenotype What can you conclude about how many genes are represented in this collection of seven mutants? At least 3 genes (can’t tell about m7) Complementation is relevant to humans Family A Family B aaBB = deaf AAbb AaBb Within each family, does deafness look like it’s dominant or recessive? recessive Assign genotypes (A, B, etc.) to the deaf individuals in these pedigrees. Complementation is relevant to humans Niemann Pick Type C disease (NPC): a recessive human neurodegenerative disease resulting in premature death Cellular cholesterol accumulation accompanies the disease (can be detected using a chemical called ‘filipin’ which fluoresces upon binding cholesterol) QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. are needed to see this picture. normal NPC NPC1:NPC2 NPC1:NPC3 Do NPC1 & NPC2 complement? Do NPC1 & NPC3 complement? Practice Question Hearing mice… independently assorting genes A and B, both needed for hearing: a, b: complete LOF, recessive AaBb x AaBb WITHOUT drawing a Punnett square, predict the progeny phenotypes and proportions with respect to hearing ability. using mutants to order the steps in a pathway .. . HC N COOCH C H2 N (AIR) For example, this molecule accumulates in an ade13 mutant. CH2 N HC R -OOC H2 N R C N CH C (SAICAR) N (CAIR) C H2 N CH C H N COO- N C O ADE13 encodes the enzyme that carries out the next step N R .. O . C C HN N CH HC C N NH Adenine The Yeast Adenine Biosynthetic Pathway ADE4 ADE5* A B ADE8 ADE6 ADE7 ADE2 ADE1 X D E F Y G C ADE13 ADE3* H red ADE17 pigment ADE16 I ADE17 ADE16 J ADE12 K ADE13 AMP A second phenotype of some ade mutants… Mutagenize: plate cells complete plate Replica-plate -adenine plate Some of the adeninerequiring mutants are red! Are the red ade mutations recessive? m8 wild-type Genotypes: ade complete plate White color is dominant replica-plate using velvet ADE -adenine plate Ability to make adenine is dominant Hypothesis: Two phenotypes/one LOF mutation How can one LOF mutation generate two very different phenotypes? some intermediate “X” X X ADE1 ade1 another adenine intermediate “Y” LOF mutation adenine Y UNK1* red pigment *not a real gene name! This gene has not yet been identified Suppose we isolate LOTS of independent red mutants: Are all red mutants defective in the SAME GENE? How to tell? Complementation tests of red mutants m9 m10 diploids mutations fail to complement = same gene m9 m11 white diploids mutations complement = different genes All pairwise combinations reveal two complementation groups. Must modify the hypothesis. Modified hypothesis for red phenotype X X X ADE2 Y ade2 ADE1 adenine ADE1 Y adenine “UNK1” red pigment But how do mutations in ADE1 result in a build-up of X? Modified hypothesis for red phenotype X X “UNK1” ADE2 Y ade1 Y adenine red pigment Mutations in either ADE1 or ADE2 lead to a defect in adenine biosynthesis and lead to the build-up of intermediates in the pathway. Excess “X” is converted to a red pigment. Test your understanding ADE7 X X “UNK1” red pigment ade2 Y Y ade1 ADE13 adenine 1. Phenotype of ade1 ade2 double mutation? Same as ade2 single mutation! Red and adenine-requiring. 2. Phenotype of ade2 ade7 double mutation? Same as ade7 single mutation! White and adenine-requiring. 3. Phenotype of ade2 ade13 double mutation? Same as ade2 single mutation! Red and adenine-requiring. 4. Phenotype of unk1? White and able to grow on -ade plates. Practice Questions ADE3 X X ADE2 Y Y ADE1 adenine “UNK1” red pigment 1A. A MATa ade2 ADE3 mutant was mated to a MATa ADE2 ade3 mutant to create a diploid. What are the phenotypes of the three strains? Assume all other genes are wild type. strain: MATa ade2 ADE3 MATa ADE2 ade3 Diploid color on complete plate? growth on -adenine plate? (yes or no) Practice Questions ADE3 X X ADE2 Y Y ADE1 adenine “UNK1” red pigment 1A. A MATa ade2 ADE3 mutant was mated to a MAT ADE2 ade3 mutant to create a diploid. What are the phenotypes of the three strains? Assume all other genes are wild type. strain: color on complete plate? growth on -adenine plate? (yes or no) MATa ade2 ADE3 red no MATa ADE2 ade3 white no Diploid white yes 1B. ADE2 and ADE3 assort independently. Draw the chromosomes at metaphase of meiosis I such that the two WILD TYPE alleles face the same pole. Place a crossover on the other chromosome arm relative to the ADE2 and ADE3 genes. A ADE2 ADE3 B C ADE2 ADE3 ade2 ade3 D ade2 ade3 1C. Recall that each tetrad contains the products of a single meiosis. Predict the genotypes and growth properties of each spore resulting from this meiosis. Spore A B C D complete genotype? grow without adenine? yes yes no no ADE2 ADE3 ADE2 ADE3 ade2 ade3 ade2 ade3 1D. Analysis of many tetrads demonstrates that three types are found, depending on the behavior of the chromosomes in meiosis. Which tetrad best fits the meiosis you just drew? Letter the spores below to match the genotypes in your table. Tetrad on complete plates #1 #2 #3 A C red B D 1E. Now draw the chromosomes at metaphase of meiosis I such that one wild type and one mutant allele face each pole. Place a crossover on the other chromosome arm relative to the Adenine genes. A ADE2 ade3 B ADE2 ade3 1F. Predict the genotypes and growth Spore complete genotype? properties of each spore resulting A from this meiosis. B grow without adenine? C D 1G. Which tetrad best fits the meiosis you just drew? Letter the spores below to match the genotypes in your table. Tetrad on complete plates #1 #2 red #3 1E. Now draw the chromosomes at metaphase of meiosis I such that one wild type and one mutant allele face each pole. Place a crossover on the other chromosome arm relative to the Adenine genes. A ADE2 ade3 C B ADE2 ade3 ade2 ADE3 D ade2 ADE3 1F. Predict the genotypes and growth Spore complete genotype? properties of each spore resulting ADE2 ade3 A from this meiosis. ade2 ADE3 B C D ADE2 ade3 ade2 ADE3 grow without adenine? no no no no 1G. Which tetrad best fits the meiosis you just drew? Letter the spores below to match the genotypes in your table. Tetrad on complete plates #1 A C B D #2 red #3 1H. Now draw the chromosomes at metaphase of meiosis I such that one wild type and one mutant allele face each pole. On one chromosome, place a crossover on the other chromosome arm relative to the Adenine gene. On the other chromosome, place a crossover BETWEEN the centromere and the Adenine gene. 1I. Predict the genotypes and growth Spore complete genotype? properties of each spore resulting A from this meiosis. B grow without adenine? C D 1J. Which tetrad best fits the meiosis you just drew? Letter the spores below to match the genotypes in your table. Tetrad on complete plates #1 #2 red #3