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Extra credit problem for Lecture #6 For extra credit question, please use the index cards provided. • Print your name and section # at top of card. • Thanks! How is sex determined in Drosophila melanogaster? Sex Determination in Drosophila and other organisms X chromosome: Autosome Balance In Drosophila, sex is determined by the ratio of the number of X chromosomes to the number of sets of autosomes Other kinds of sex determination • • • • • Grasshoppers, crickets, roaches: XO Bees, ants, wasps: haplodiploidy Snakes: ZZ/ZW Lizards: both XX/XY and ZZ/ZW systems Crocodiles, most turtles, and some lizards, sex is determined by the incubation temperature during a critical period of embryo development. This is known as temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD). Some lizards? Turtles Lizards, Turtles, Crocodilians In some organisms, sex is not ‘determined’ at all! Some fish change sex as they get older or larger. In clown fish, largest group member is female, second largest is male, and all others are nonbreeding. Sometimes the largest fish in the group will become male, all others will be female (wrasses). Coral Goby Gobiodon histrio Monogamous pairs If mate dies or leaves, resident will court next fish to come by, one will change sex to accommodate. And some species are all female! Asexual Cnemidophorus species are all female; reproduce via parthenogenesis. Diploid or triploid eggs develop directly from oocytes via premeiotic endomitosis, no cellular/nuclear division. At meiosis, identical rather than homologous chromosomes pair, and then segregate. All offspring are females genetically identical to their mothers. Cnemidophorus species tend to have extremely low levels of genetic diversity. From A. J. Collum, Creighton Univ, http://biology.creighton.edu/faculty/cullum/CnemmyInfo.html Genomic Imprinting Differential expression of genetic traits depending on whether the trait has been inherited from a mother or a father. Disease can result from imprinting QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Paternal SNRPN gene active (chrom. 15) Short stature Mild retardation Poor muscle tone Compulsive eating Maternal SNRPN Paternal SNRPN Gene inactive by Gene inactive by imprinting mutation Fertilization Prader-Willi Syndrome QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Both copies inactive Genetic Linkage and Mapping Meiosis: Prophase I Closer look Notation Aa Diploid Adult Haploid gametes (single chromatid) A — ————— • — ————— • a A __•_______ A __•_______ a __•_______ a __•_______ Two homologous chromosomes, four chromatids total 1/2 A : 1/2 a Dihybrid Cross AA BB Female A B — ————— P: • — ————— • A Gametes: aa bb Male —— ————— • —— ————— • B a — ————— • — ————— • a Egg (A B) A —•————— b —— ————— • —— ————— • b Sperm (a b) B ——•———— a —•————— b ——•———— F1 adult after the S phase A — ————— F1: • — ————— • a B —— ————— • —— ————— • b A — ————— F1: • — ————— • a A —•————— A 4 gamete types, equally frequent —•————— a —•————— a —•————— B —— ————— • —— ————— • b B ——•———— b ——•———— Parental Recombinant B ——•———— Recombinant b ——•———— Parental F2 of dihybrid cross when genes not linked • What proportion of the gametes of the double heterozygote are recombinant? 50 %