Title: Genetic Inheritance
1Genetic Inheritance
2Mendels Laws
- Gregor Mendel was an Austrian monk who in 1860
developed certain laws of heredity after doing
crosses between garden pea plants.
3Gregor Mendel
- Gregor Mendel combined his farmers skills with
his training in mathematics. - Mendels law of segregation states that each
individual has two factors (called genes today)
for each trait. - Alternative forms of a gene affecting the same
trait are now referred to as alleles.
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- The factors segregate during the formation of the
gametes and each gamete has only one factor from
each pair. - Fertilization gives each new individual two
factors again.
5The Inheritance of a Single Trait
- A capital letter indicates a dominant allele,
which is expressed when present. - An example is W for widows peak.
- A lowercase letter indicates a recessive allele,
which is only expressed in the absence of a
dominant allele. - An example is w for continuous hairline.
6Widows peak
7Genotype and Phenotype
- Genotype - the genes of an individual.
- Homozygous - both alleles are the same for
example, WW stands for homozygous dominant and ww
stands for homozygous recessive.
8- Heterozygous means that the members of the
allelic pair are differentfor example, Ww. - Phenotype refers to the physical or observable
characteristics of the individual. - Both WW and Ww result in widows peak, two
genotypes with the same phenotype.
9One-Trait Crosses
- In one-trait crosses, one trait is considered.
- When performing crosses, the original parents are
called the parental generation, or the P
generation. - All of their children are the filial generation,
or F generation.
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11- If you know the genotype of the parents, it is
possible to determine the gametes and use a
Punnett square to determine the phenotypic ratio
among the offspring. - This ratio is used to state the chances of a
particular phenotype.
12Monohybrid cross
13- In the cross of Ww x Ww, what is the chance
having a homozygous dominant child? what is the
chance of having a heterozygous child? what is
the chance of having a child with widows peak? - Chance of W ½, or chance of w ½
- The probability of these genotypes is
- The chance of WW ½ x ½ ¼
- The chance of Ww ½ x ½ ¼
- The chance of wW ½ x ½ ¼
- The chance of ww ½ x ½ ¼
- The chance of widows peak (WW, Ww, wW) is ¼ ¼
¼ ¾ or 75.
14The One-Trait Testcross
- A testcross is used to determine the genotype of
a phenotypically dominant individual. - A testcross crosses the dominant phenotype with
the recessive phenotype. - Why?
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16The Inheritance of Many Traits
- The Law of Independent Assortment
- -each pair of alleles segregates independently
and all possible combinations of alleles can
occur in the gametes. - What gametes can a individual with the genotype
AaBb produce?
17- Answer
- AB, Ab, aB, ab
- What is the probability that a person homozygous
dominant for two traits will have a child that is
phenotypically dominant for both traits?
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19What is the expected phenotypic ratio if you
cross two individuals that are heterozygous for
widows peak and short fingers? First- determine
the possible gametes then draw a Punnett square.
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21What is the expected phenotypic ratio if you
cross an individual heterozygous for widows peak
and short fingers with a person with continuous
hairline and long fingers? First- determine the
possible gametes then draw a Punnett square.
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23Two-Trait Crosses and Probability
- It is possible to use the laws of probability to
arrive at a phenotypic ratio for a two-trait
cross without using a Punnett square. - If you flip two coins, what is the probability of
getting two heads? - If you flip two coins, what is the probability of
getting one head?
24- The probabilities for the dihybrid cross between
heterozygotes - Probability of widows peak and short fingers ¾
x ¾ 9/16 - Probability of widows peak and long fingers ¾
x ¼ 3/16 - Probability of straight hairline and short
fingers ¼ x ¾ 3/16 - Probability of straight hairline and long fingers
¼ x ¼ 1/16
25Probability and the Hexahybrid Cross
- What is the probability that a cross between two
individuals heterozygous for each of six traits
will have an offspring dominant for each of those
seven traits?
26Genetic Disorders
- Patterns of Inheritance
- pedigree charts shows pattern of inheritance of
a characteristic within a family. -
27- males are squares
- females are circles.
- Filled squares or circles indicate that the
individual has the condition - Patterns often indicate the mode of inheritance
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30Autosomal Recessive Disorders
- Tay-Sachs Disease
- Tay-Sachs disease is common among United States
Jews of central and eastern European descent. - An affected infant develops neurological
impairments and dies by the age of three or four.
- Tay-Sachs results from a lack of hexosaminidase A
and the storage of its substrate in lysosomes.
31Cystic Fibrosis
- Cystic fibrosis is the most common lethal genetic
disorder among Caucasians. - A chloride ion transport protein is defective in
affected individuals. - Normally when chloride ion passes through a
membrane, water follows. - In cystic fibrosis patients, a reduction in water
results in a thick mucus which accumulates in
bronchial passageways and pancreatic ducts.
32Phenylketonuria (PKU)
- Individuals with phenylketonuria lack an enzyme
needed for the normal metabolism of
phenylalanine, coded by an allele on chromosome
12. - Newborns are regularly tested for elevated
phenylalanine in the urine. - If the infant is not put on a phenylalanine-restri
ctive diet in infancy until age seven when the
brain is fully developed, brain damage and severe
mental retardation result.
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34Autosomal Dominant Disorders
- Neurofibromatosis
- Small benign tumors, made up largely of nerve
cells, occur under skin or on various organs. - The effects can range from mild to severe, and
some neurological impairment is possible this
disorder is variably expressive. - The gene for this trait is on chromosome 17.
35Huntington Disease
- Individuals with Huntington disease experience
progressive degeneration of the nervous system
and no treatment is presently known. - Most patients appear normal until middle age.
- The gene coding for the protein huntingtin
contains many more repeats of glutamines than
normal.
36Huntington disease
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38Beyond Simple Inheritance Patterns
- Polygenic Inheritance
- Polygenic traits are governed by more than one
gene pair.
39Skin Color
- The inheritance of skin color, determined by an
unknown number of gene pairs, is another example
of polygenic inheritance.
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41Multiple Allelic Traits
- more than two alternative alleles exist for a
particular gene locus. - blood type is an example
42ABO Blood Types
- Alleles IA,IB,I
- Genotype Phenotype
- IA IA A
- IA i A
- IB IB B
- IB i B
- IA IB AB
- i i O
43- What are the possible blood types of children
from a mother with type A blood and a father with
type B blood?
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45Incompletely Dominant Traits
- Codominance -both alleles are equally expressed
in a heterozygote. (blood type) - Incomplete dominance - heterozygote shows an
intermediate phenotype (curly vs. wavy hair
sickle cell anemia)
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47- Many genetic disorders and other traits are
inherited according to laws first established by
Gregor Mendel. - Inheritance is often more complex, providing
exceptions to Mendels laws but helping to
explain an even wider variety in patterns of gene
inheritance.
48Sex-Linked Traits
- Sex Determination-
- XX female
- XY male
- Traits controlled by genes on the X or Y
chromosomes are sex-linked - An allele is termed X-linked.
49- Duchenne muscular dystrophy involves the absence
of a protein called dystrophin that is involved
in the release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic
reticulum of muscle cells. - The lack of dystrophin causes calcium to leak
into the cell, which promotes the action of an
enzyme that dissolves muscle fibers. - A test is now available to determine the carriers
of Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
50Hemophilia
- Hemophilia refers to the lack of one of several
clotting factors that leads to excessive bleeding
in affected individuals. - Hemophiliacs bleed externally after injury, but
also bleed internally around joints. - Hemorrhages can be stopped with blood
transfusions or a biotechnology clotting factor.
51Muscular Dystrophy
- Muscular dystrophy is characterized by the
wasting of muscles. - The most common form is Duchenne muscular
dystrophy this is an X-linked disorder,
occurring in 1 of 3,600 males. - Muscles weaken, frequent falls and difficulty in
rising occur early death occurs by age 20.
52Color Blindness
- Three types of cones are in the retina detecting
red, green, or blue. - Genes for blue cones are autosomal those for red
and green cones are on the X chromosome. - Males are much more likely to have red-green
color blindness than females. - About 8 of Caucasian men have red-green color
blindness.
53X-Linked Disorders
54X-Linked Alleles
- The key for an X-linked problem shows the allele
attached to the X as in - XB normal vision
- Xb color blindness.
- Females with the genotype XBXb are carriers
because they appear to be normal but each son has
a 50 chance of being color blind depending on
which allele the son receives. - XbXb and XbY are both colorblind.
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57- Why are there so few Y-linked or X-linked
dominant disorders?
58Linked Genes
- Alleles are inherited as a group, rather than
according to the law of independent assortment - What are the linkage groups
- Changes expected ratios (example)
- Are the basis of some genetic tests.
- Crossing over can tell us how far apart genes
are.