Title: Epigenetics The emerging field of epigenetics proposes that
1Chapter 15The Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
21860s Mendels work - Genetics 1880
Mitosis Cytology, Flemming 1890 Meiosis
Cytology, Van Beneden 1900 Rediscovery of
Mendels work Genetics 1902 Cytology and
Genetics converge - Sutton
31902 Cytology and Genetics come together
- Similarities between Mendels factors and the
behavior of chromosomes - Chromosomes and genes are both paired in diploid
cells - Homologous chromosomes separate and allele pairs
segregate during meiosis - Fertilization restores the paired condition for
both chromosomes and genes
4The Chromosome Theory of Inheritance
- Mendelian factors or genes are located on
chromosomes - It is the chromosomes that segregate and
independently assort - Thomas Hunt Morgan provided convincing evidence
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6Drosophila Melanogaster
- Morgans choice of organism was the fruit fly
- because they are
- easily cultured,
- prolific breeders,
- have a short generation time and
- have only 4 pairs of chromosomes (easily visible)
7Thomas Hunt Morgan in the Fly Lab
8Drosophila Have 4 pairs of Chromosomes
9http//www.news.cornell.edu/releases/March01/fly_e
ar.hrs.html
10Some Mutations
11Morgan Traced a Gene to a Specific Chromosome
- Provided convincing evidence that Mendels
inheritable factors are located on chromosomes.
12Morgans genetic symbols are now convention. A
genes symbol is based on the first mutant
discovered Wild type trait is designated by a
. w white eye allele Cy curly
wing w wild type allele Cy wild
type If the mutant is recessive, the letter is
lower case If the mutant is dominant, the letter
is capitalized Wild type is not always dominant
13Discovery of Sex Linkage
- After a year of breeding to find mutant flies,
Morgan discovered a single male fly with white
eyes. - He mated this white-eyed male with a red-eyed
(normal or wild type) female.
14F1 generation
- All had red eyes, suggesting the wild- type was
dominant over the mutant. - Thus, the F2 generation should exhibit the 31
phenotypic ratio.
15F2 Generation
- 31 (red to white) ratio seen, however
- All females were red-eyed
- Only males were white-eyed
- Whats going on?
- Morgan deduced that eye color is linked to sex
and the gene for eye color is located on the X
chromosome.
16Morgan and Linked Traits
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18Sex Linked Traits
- Eye color is linked to sex and the gene must be
on the X chromosome. - Females carry 2 copies, males 1
- If mutant allele is recessive, white eyed female
has the trait on both Xs. - White eyed male cannot hide the trait since he
has only one X.
19- Who is responsible when a boy inherits a X linked
condition? - The mother (father only contributes Y).
- A carrier of the condition is heterozygous for
the trait, so only females can carry sex linked
traits.
20Linked Genes
- Linked genes are located on the same chromosome
and tend to be inherited together, they do NOT
assort independently. - A dihybrid cross of linked genes will NOT give
the F2 ratio of 9331.
21- In flies gray body(b) is dominant to black body
(b), and long wings (vg) are dominant to
vestigial wings (vg). - What is the expected phenotypic ratio from a
cross between a heterozygous gray, heterozygous
normal winged fly with a black vestigial fly?
22- b black body vg vestigial winged
- b gray body vg wild type wings
- bb vgvg X bb vgvg (test
cross) - gray, normal black, vestigial
- Morgan expected a 1111 ratio,
- he did not get it.
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24- What explains the non-Mendelian results?
- There was NO independent assortment!
- The traits are linked on the same chromosome.
25- If the traits are linked, then all of the
offspring should resemble the parental types,
black vestigial or gray normal. - How did we get the recombinant traits of black
normal and gray vestigial?
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28- When half the progeny are recombinants, there is
a 50 frequency of recombination - A 50 frequency usually indicates that the genes
are on different chromosomes as this is the
expected result for random assortment. - If the genes in the previous cross were
completely linked, a 11 of parental only
phenotypes would occur.
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32Using Recombination Frequency to Map Traits
- Recombination frequency between black and
vestigial traits is 17 - Recombination frequency between cn and black is
9 - Recombination between cn and vg is 9.5
- Map these traits on the chromosome.
33A Linkage Map
34- Determine the order of genes along a chromosome
based on the following recombination frequencies - A - B 8
- A - C 28
- A - D 25
- B - C 20
- B - D 33
35D A B C
8
28
25
20
33
36A Partial Genetic Map
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38Sex-Linked Traits in Humans
- Color blindness
- Duchenne muscular dystrophy
- Hemophilia
- Far more males than females have these disorders
- Males are said to be hemizygous (one copy of a
gene in a diploid organism)
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41X Inactivation in Females
- How does an organism compensate for the fact that
some individuals have a double dosage of
sex-linked genes, while others have only one? - X inactivation , the inactive X condenses into a
Barr body - The inactivation is random and approximately half
the Xs from Mom and half the Xs from Dad will
inactivate
42X-inactivation and Calico Cats
43- The calico cat is the result of multiple alleles
on the X chromosome combined with X inactivation. - One allele causes orange fur and the other causes
black fur. - The male cat will be either orange or black.
- Only a heterozygous female will be calico with
regions that are orange and regions that are
black based on the X inactivation.
44Errors and Exceptions
- Alterations of chromosome number
- Anuploidy, abnormal of chromosomes
- trisomy 21 Down syndrome
- trisomy 13 Patau syndrome
- trisomy 18 Edwards syndrome
- Polyploidy, more than two complete sets
- triploidy 3n
- tetraploidy 4n
- nondisjunction, mitosis without cytokinesis
45Sex Chromosome Anuploidies
- Less severe conditions because few genes on Y and
X inactivation. - Single Y maleness
- Lack of Y femaleness
46- XO Turner Syndrome - only viable monosomy
(female, short, lack mature female sex organs,
sterile) - XXY Kleinfelter Syndrome (male, sterile,
some feminization) also XXXY, XXXXY and XXXXXY - XXX metafemale (variable effects, fertile)
- XYY tall male, fertile, many show no other
effects.
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49Alterations of Chromosome Structure
- Deletion
- Duplication
- Translocation
- Inversion
- Non-reciprocal / unequal crossing over
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51Normal Human Karyotype
52Cancer Cell Chromosomes
53Fragile X
Fragile X syndrome is the most common genetically
inherited form of mental retardation
54Genomic Imprinting
- Certain genes are imprinted in some way in each
generation - Phenotypic effect of a particular allele depends
on which parent the allele was from - Old imprints are erased in each generation when
sperm and ova are produced
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57Example of Genomic Imprinting
- Deletion of a particular segment of Chrom 15
- can lead to either
- Prader-Willi syndrome (mental retardation,
obesity, small hands and feet) if the allele is
from the father, or - Angelman syndrome (uncontrollable laughter,
jerky movements, mental and motor symptoms) if
the allele is from the mother.
58Epigenetics
The study of factors that control genes
- The emerging field of epigenetics proposes
that there is a "second code" of programming on
top of our DNA, a code that -- unlike DNA -- can
change during our lifetimes.
Many studies involve twins
59- In the past 5 years, epigenetics researchers
have theorized that - 1. our diet,
- 2. the chemicals we are exposed to and even
- 3. our behavior toward one another
- can cause changes in the way our genes are
expressed, and contribute (by making people more
susceptible to) or trigger mental illnesses like
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder - and some of
the epigenetic changes may even be passed on to
future generations.
60Mitochondrial DNA
- Extranuclear DNA is found as small circles in
mitochondria and chloroplasts - This DNA is reproduced and transmitted to
daughter cells - These cytoplasmic genes do not display Mendelian
inheritance (no meiosis) - Mutations in mitochondrial DNA (passed on by the
mother only) can cause rare human diseases.
61The Y Chromosome
62The Evolution of the Y Chromosome