* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download X Chromosome
Transposable element wikipedia , lookup
Skewed X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup
Genealogical DNA test wikipedia , lookup
Molecular cloning wikipedia , lookup
Cancer epigenetics wikipedia , lookup
Mitochondrial DNA wikipedia , lookup
No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup
Gel electrophoresis of nucleic acids wikipedia , lookup
Deoxyribozyme wikipedia , lookup
Oncogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
DNA supercoil wikipedia , lookup
Cre-Lox recombination wikipedia , lookup
Ridge (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Dominance (genetics) wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer wikipedia , lookup
Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Cell-free fetal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Extrachromosomal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Genomic imprinting wikipedia , lookup
Human genome wikipedia , lookup
Y chromosome wikipedia , lookup
Non-coding DNA wikipedia , lookup
Neocentromere wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Genomic library wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Genome editing wikipedia , lookup
Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
CH 14 HUMAN GENETICS The Role of Chromosomes Genome – the full set of genetic information that an organism carries in its DNA. Karyotype – shows a picture of chromosomes - Chromosomes are always in pairs. - Arranged in order of decreasing size. - The last pair of chromosomes, or the 23rd pair are called the sex chromosomes. - Males (XY) - Females (XX) - Autosomes do not determine a person’s gender. They are body chromosomes. They determine ones characteristics! - Chromosome #1-22 2 Karyotype - Amniocentesis, a sampling of the fetal fluid which then can help determine if there are any genetic disorders of the developing fetus. - Geneticist will look at the chromosomes of the fetus. - Chromosomes are taken during mitosis because they are fully condensed and visible. Does any of the following fit with Mendel’s Conclusions? •Cross red flower and white 4 flower?? •Result: 4 pink flowers •Cross a black chicken with a white chicken?? •Result: 4 black & white speckled chickens •Ending up with 4 different colored rabbits as possible offspring?? •Why are there many shades of skin color and hair color in humans as opposed to just black and white? Transmission of Human Traits A. Incomplete dominance, neither allele/gene is completely dominant nor completely recessive. - Heterozygous phenotype is in between the two homozygous phenotypes - individual is a blend Snap dragons (flowers) RR= Red WW= White If a red snap dragon were crossed with white snapdragon, the heterozygous plant would be PINK! RR x WW Offspring = RW = pink 5 B. Codominance - Codominant alleles/genes are both fully and separately expressed. - Both phenotypes are shown in the Heterozygous individual. - Black hamster crossed with a white hamster B B - BB X WW W BW BW - The heterozygous individual BW, would be both black and white in color. W BW BW 6 Co-dominance and Multiple Alleles in Blood Types Example: 4 Blood Types Blood groups: 3 alleles = A (IA), B (IB), O (i) The four blood types are Type A, Type B, Type AB, Type O 7 Blood Typing • Type A Genotypes = AA (IA IA), AO (IAi) • Type B Genotypes = BB (IB IB), BO (IBi) • Type AB Genotype = AB (IA IB) • Type O Genotype = OO (ii) A and B are always dominant to O. AO (IAi) = A type blood BO (IBi) = B type blood • A and B are NOT dominant to each other, they are Codominant So remember… There are 3 alleles (A, B, O), however there are 4 blood types. (A, B, AB, O) Punnett Square Cross a woman Heterozygous for A-blood and a man with AB-blood •Parent genotypes: AO x AB •Genotypes: 1IAIA :1IAIB :1IAi :1IBi •Phenotypes: i IA 1: AB type 2: A-type 1: B-type IA IAIA IAi IB IAIB IBi More Codominance Normal Red Blood Cell Sickled Red Blood Cell •African American Population •Resistance to Malaria • • • Sickle Cell NN= Normal Blood Cells SS= Sickled Blood Cells NS = Both Normal and Sickled Cells •Cross a heterozygous mom with a heterozygous dad for blood cells. Parent genotypes: Genotypes: Phenotypes: 12 Multiple Alleles & Polygenic Traits • Multiple Alleles • Genes with > 2 ALLELES • Ex) Rabbits fur color • C: wild type • Cch: chinchilla • Ch; himalyan • c: albino • Ex) Human blood types • A, B, AB, O • Polygenic Traits • Traits controlled by 2 or more GENES • Ex) hair color • Ex) eye color • Ex) skin color • More than 4 genes Codominance: Erminette chickens Multiple Alleles: Rabbit Fur Color Incomplete Dominance: 4 o’ clock flowers Genes and the Environment •Your phenotype is not just dependent on your genes, but also the environment •Examples •Sea turtles gender –determined by the temp of sand •Gender of alligators – determined by temp. •Height of people- influenced by nutrition 15 C. Sex-linked traits - Genes on the X chromosome 1. Only the X Chromosome carries genes so if a gene is on the X chromosome, the female would have TWO of those genes and the male would have only ONE. Female that has the disorder Female carrier for a disorder X Y Male that has the disorder X X • X & Y Chromosomes & Traits • X chromosome much larger than the Y. Has over 1,200 genes on it. • Y chromosome only has about 140 genes on it, most which are associated with male sex determination and sperm development. 17 C. Sex-linked traits - A genetic disorder that is found or linked to the X chromosome ONLY Females can carry a sex-linked genetic disorder and not have the disorder. - This is known as being a carrier of the disorder. In order for the female to have the disorder both X chromosomes must have the gene for the disorder - Males (XY) express all of their sex linked genes because they only have one X chromosome. - If the X chromosome has the gene, the male has the disorder. - Males can not be carriers because they only have one X chromosome - Examples: Hemophilia and Colorblindness 18 1. Colorblindness a sex-linked recessive trait. (C- normal vision; c- colorblindness) • In order for a female to be color blind, she would have to have two colorblind genes. • A male needs to only have one colorblind gene. X Y X X What do you see? A woman is heterozygous for Normal vision. She marries a man who is colorblind. What is the predicted colorblindness outcome for their children? LET … N = normal vision and n = color blind Parent genotypes: N n X X x n XY Mom Dad FIND THE: Genotypic Ratio: Phenotypic Ratio: X X n Y N X n X Chromosome Inactivation • Males and females can differ in sex linked traits. • The expression of genes on the sex chromosomes differs from the expression of autosomal genes. • Genes located on the sex chromosomes are called sex- linked genes or X-linked genes. • Males express all of the alleles on both sex chromosomes. • In females one of the two X chromosomes is randomly turned off by a process called X chromosome inactivation. 22 Human Traits • Pedigree – a chart which shows the relationships within a family. • Phenotypes are used to infer genotypes on a pedigree. • You can often determine if an allele for a trait is dominant or recessive or sex-linked. A circle represents a female. A horizontal line connecting a male and a female represents a marriage. A shaded circle or square indicates that a person expresses the trait. A square represents a male. A vertical line and a bracket connect the parents to their children. A circle or square that is not shaded indicates that a person does not express the trait. Studying the Human Genome 1. Manipulating DNA • Because DNA is so large, in order to work with it, it must be cut into smaller pieces. • Many bacteria produce enzymes that can cut DNA • Restriction enzymes – Cut DNA into precise pieces at specific locations that are several hundred bases in length (known as restriction fragments). • When the restriction enzyme cuts the DNA, the ends are called “sticky ends” so they can bond with the complementary base sequence. 24 Studying the Human Genome 2. Separating the DNA • Gel electrophoresis – a technique used to separate and analyze the differently sized cut fragments of DNA. • The fragments of DNA are put into wells on a gel. • An electric voltage moves them down the gel. • DNA is negatively charged so they move toward the positive charge • Shorter fragments of DNA move faster than longer fragments. • Fragments appear as bands on the gel when specific stains are applied. 25 Studying the Human Genome 3. Reading DNA • The single-stranded DNA fragments are placed in a test tube containing DNA polymerase and the four nucleotide bases along with a chemical dye. • Each time a dye-labeled base is added to a new DNA strand, the synthesis of that strand stops. • The result is a series of color-coded DNA fragments of different lengths. 26 Genetic Fingerprinting Gel Electrophoresis The Human Genome Project • Launched in 1990. • A 13 year, international effort with the main goal of sequencing all 3 billion base pairs of human DNA and identifying all human genes. Known as Shotgun sequencing This method rapidly sorts DNS fragments by overlapping base sequences. Locating a gene A typical gene, such as insulin, has several DNA sequences that can serve as locators. These include the promotor, sequences between introns and exons, and start and stop codons. Bioinformatics A new field that combines molecular biology with information science. It is critical to studying and understanding the human genome.