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Year 10 Genetics 2 Human inheritance Chris Willocks 2006 1 Heritable traits • Widow’s peak • Cleft chin • Tongue rolling 2 Heritable traits • Attached and unattached ears • Concave nose 3 Blood groups • 4 blood groups – A, B, O, AB • Blood group A has A antigens on red blood cells • What antigens are on the other blood groups? 4 Phenotypes and genotypes of blood groups Phenotype Genotype A AA, AO B BB, BO O OO AB AB 5 Blood group inheritance • Can a couple of blood groups A and B have a child with blood group O? P AO X BO Gametes (½A +½O) , (½B +½O) F1 genotypes ¼AB + ¼AO + ¼BO + ¼OO F1 phenotypes ¼AB + ¼A + ¼B + ¼O 6 Karyotypes 7 Pedigrees 8 Your family pedigree • Draw your family as a pedigree 9 Types of inheritance 4 types of inheritance: 1. Autosomal recessive eg Albinism 2. Autosomal dominant eg Huntington’s disease 3. Sex-linked recessive eg Haemophilia 4. Sex-linked dominant eg Rickets 10 Albinism • Autosomal recessive • How can 2 normal parents have an albino child? A = normal a = albino P Aa X Aa Gametes (½A +½a) (½A +½a) F1 genotypes ¼AA + ½Aa + ¼aa F1 phenotypes ¾normal + ¼albino 11 Albinism pedigrees • Assign genotypes to each person in the pedigrees • Let A = normal, a = albino 12 Polydactyly • Autosomal dominant • Will a person with polydactyly pass it to their children? Let P = polydactyly p = normal P Pp X pp Gametes (½P +½p) , p F1 genotypes ½Pp + ½ pp F1 phenotypes ½polydactyly + ½normal 13 Polydactyly pedigree • Let P = polydactyly, p = normal • Assign genotypes to the pedigree • Number the generations and individuals using the standard notation 14 Haemophilia • Haemophiliacs lack blood clotting factors • Need clotting factors from blood donations to survive • Blood is screened to remove any viruses before being used • Many haemophiliacs were infected with hepatitis or HIV 15 Haemophilia inheritance • Haemophilia gene is on the X chromosome • Sex-linked recessive X = normal, Xh = haemophilia P X Xh x XY Gametes X, Xh and X, Y F1 genotypes XX, X Xh , XY, XhY F1 phenotypes normal, carrier, normal, haemophiliac • Carrier females pass it to half their sons 16 Haemophilia pedigree • Assign genotypes to the pedigree • Let X = normal, Xh = haemophilia 17 Haemophilia in the Royal Family • Queen Victoria was a carrier for haemophilia • Due to a chance mutation. • Her children married other royalty and passed the trait throughout the royal families of Europe. 18 Queen Victoria’s pedigree 19 Rickets • Sex linked dominant XR = Rickets , X = normal P XR Y x XX Gametes XR, Y and X F1 genotypes XR X, XY F1 phenotypes Rickets, normal • A male with Rickets will pass it to his daughters 20 Rickets pedigree • Number and assign genotypes • XR = Rickets , X = normal 21