Title: Chromosomes and Human Genetics Chapter 12 Chromosomes
1Chromosomes andHuman Genetics
2Chromosomes Cancer
- Some genes on chromosomes control cell growth and
division - If something affects chromosome structure at or
near these loci, cell division may spiral out of
control (no brakes at G1) - This can lead to cancer
3 Philadelphia Chromosome
- First abnormal chromosome to be associated with a
cancer - Reciprocal translocation (more on this later)
- Causes chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)
- Video Gene Therapy to treat Cancer
4Genes
- Units of information about heritable traits
- In eukaryotes, distributed among chromosomes
- Each has a particular locus
- Location on a chromosome
5 Homologous Chromosomes
- Homologous autosomes (all chromosomes other than
those that determine sex (X, Y) are identical in
length, size, shape, and gene sequence - Sex chromosomes are nonidentical but still
homologous - Homologous chromosomes interact, then segregate
from one another during meiosis
6Alleles
- Different molecular forms of a gene
- Arise through mutation
- Diploid cell has a pair of alleles at each locus
- Alleles on homologous chromosomes may be same or
different
7Sex Chromosomes
- Discovered in late 1800s
- Mammals, fruit flies
- XX is female, XY is male
- Human X and Y chromosomes function as homologues
during meiosis
8Karyotype Preparation - Stopping the Cycle
- Cultured cells are arrested at metaphase by
adding colchicine - This is when cells are most condensed and easiest
to identify
9 Karyotype Preparation
- Arrested cells are broken open
- Metaphase chromosomes are fixed and stained
- Chromosomes are photographed through microscope
- Photograph of chromosomes is cut up and arranged
to form karyotype diagram
10Figure 12.4Page 197
centrifugation
Obtain cells and arrest them in metaphase with
colchicine
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10
11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 XX (or
XY)
11Animation
Preparation of a karyotype animation.
Click to view animation.
12Sex Determination
female (XX)
male (XY)
eggs
sperm
Figure 12.5Page 198
13 The Y Chromosome
- Fewer than two dozen genes identified
- One is the master gene for male sex determination
- SRY gene (sex-determining region of Y)
- SRY present, testes form testosterone
- SRY absent, ovaries form estrogen, progesterone
14Effect of YChromosome sex-determining region of
Y (SRY)
appearance of structures that will give rise
to external genitalia
appearance of uncommitted duct system of
embryo at 7 weeks
7 weeks
Y present
Y absent
Y present
Y absent
testes
ovaries
10 weeks
ovary
testis
birth approaching
Figure 12.6Page 199
15The X Chromosome
- Carries more than 2,300 genes
- Most genes deal with nonsexual traits (ex blood
clotting) - Genes on X chromosome can be expressed in both
males and females
16Discovering Linkage
homozygous dominant female
recessive male
x
Gametes
X
X
X
Y
All F1 have red eyes
x
Gametes
X
X
X
Y
1/4
1/4
1/4
F2 generation
1/4
Figure 12.7Page 200
17Discovering Linkage
homozygous dominant female
recessive male
x
Gametes
X
X
X
Y
All F1 have red eyes
Morgan looked at Drosophila melanogaster Reciproc
al crosses
x
Gametes
X
X
X
Y
1/4
1/4
1/4
F2 generation
1/4
Figure 12.7Page 200
18 Linkage Groups
- Genes linked on one type of chromosome (will all
go to the same gamete, no crossing over in
Prophase I) - Fruit flies
- 4 homologous chromosomes
- 4 linkage groups
- Not all genes on chromosome are tightly linked
19Full Linkage
x
Parents
AB
ab
All AaBb
F1 offspring
meiosis, gamete formation
Genes all go to the same gamete, no crossing over
in Prophase I
Equal ratios of two types of gametes
Figure 12.8aPage 201
50 AB
50 ab
20Incomplete Linkage
AC
ac
x
Parents
F1 offspring
All AaCc
Some genes crossing over in Prophase I
meiosis, gamete formation
a
a
A
A
Unequal ratios of four types of gametes
C
c
C
c
parental genotypes
recombinant genotypes
Figure 12.8bPage 201
21Crossover Frequency
Proportional to the distance that separates genes
A
B
C
D
Crossing over will disrupt linkage between A and
B (bigger distance between) more often than C and
D (shorter distance between)
In-text figurePage 201
22Linkage Mapping in Humans
- Linkage maps based on pedigree analysis through
generations - Color blindness and hemophilia are very closely
linked on X chromosome - Can be transmitted from mother who is the carrier
- Incomplete linkage may show only color blindness
or hemophilia, not both, due to crossing over
(genetic recombination)
23 Genetic Abnormality
- A rare, uncommon version of a trait
- Polydactyly
- Unusual number of toes or fingers (6)
- Does not cause any health problems
- View of trait as disfiguring is subjective
24Pedigree (chart of genetic connections) Symbols
male
female
marriage/mating
offspring in order of birth, from left to right
Individual showing trait being studied
sex not specified
generation
I, II, III, IV...
Figure 12.9aPage 202
25Pedigree for Polydactyly
Black s fingers Blue s toes
male
female
5,5 6,6
5,5 6,6
6,6 5,5
6,6 5,5
6
7
5,5 6,6
5,5 6,6
5,5 6,6
5,5 6,6
5,6 6,7
12
6,6 6,6
Figure 12.9bPage 202
26Animation
Human pedigree diagram animation.
Click to view animation.
27Genetic Disorders (p. 203)
- Inherited conditions that cause mild to severe
medical problems (syndrome has a set of symptoms
that characterize the disorder diseases have
symptoms too, but are illness caused by
infectious, dietary, or environmental factors,
NOT by inheritance) - Why dont genetic disorders disappear?
- Mutation introduces new rare alleles
- In heterozygotes, harmful allele is masked, so it
can still be passed on to offspring
28Autosomal Recessive Inheritance Patterns
- If parents are both heterozygous, child will have
a 25 chance of being affected
Figure 12.10aPage 204
29 Galactosemia
- Caused by autosomal recessive allele
- Gene specifies a mutant enzyme in the pathway
that breaks down lactose - Galactose accumulates to toxic levels damage to
eyes, liver, brain, and causes malnutrition,
diarrhea, and vomiting
Remedy eliminate all dairy products in diet
In-text figurePage 204
30Autosomal Dominant Inheritance
- Trait typically appears in every generation
Figure 12.10bPage 204
31Animation
Autosomal-recessive inheritance interaction.
Click to view animation.
32Huntington Disorder
- Autosomal dominant allele
- Expressed even in heterozygotes
- Causes involuntary movements, nervous system
deterioration, death - Symptoms dont usually show up until person is
past age 30 - People often pass allele on before they know they
have it - Video Huntington Disorder
33Achondroplasia
- Autosomal dominant allele
- In homozygous form usually leads to stillbirth
- Heterozygotes display a type of dwarfism
- Have short arms and legs relative to other body
parts
34X-Linked Recessive Inheritance (color blindness,
hemophilia, fragile X syndrome)
- Males show disorder more than females
- Son cannot inherit disorder from his father (he
gets his maleness Y from dad)
Figure 12.12aPage 205
35Examples of X-Linked Traits
- Color blindness
- Inability to distinguish among some colors
- Hemophilia
- Blood-clotting disorder
- 1/7,000 males has allele for hemophilia A
- Was common in European royal families
36Fragile X Syndrome
- An X-linked recessive disorder
- Causes mental retardation
- Mutant allele for a gene that normally would
specify a protein required for brain development - Allele has repeated segments of DNA (duplications)
37Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria
- Mutation causes accelerated aging
- No evidence of it running in families
- Appears to be dominant
- Seems to arise as spontaneous mutation
- Usually causes death (heart attack, stoke) in
early teens
38Duplication
- Gene sequence that is repeated several to
hundreds of times - Duplications occur in normal chromosomes
- May have adaptive advantage
- Useful mutations may occur in copy
39Duplication
normal chromosome
one segment repeated
three repeats
40Inversion
- A linear stretch of DNA is reversed
- within the chromosome
segments G, H, I become inverted
In-text figurePage 206
41Translocation
- A piece of one chromosome becomes attached to
another nonhomologous chromosome - Most are reciprocal
- Philadelphia chromosome (1st cancer chromosome)
arose from a reciprocal translocation between
chromosomes 9 and 22
42Translocation
In-text figurePage 206
one chromosome
a nonhomologous chromosome
nonreciprocal translocation
In-text figurePage 206
43Deletion
- Loss of some segment of a chromosome
- Most are lethal or cause serious disorder
- Cri-du-chat mental impairment and abnormal
larynx (cats meow)
44 Aneuploidy
- Individuals have one extra or less chromosome
- (2n 1 or 2n - 1)
- Major cause of human reproductive failure
- Most human miscarriages are aneuploids
45 Polyploidy
- Individuals have three or more of each type of
chromosome (3n, 4n) - Common in flowering plants
- Lethal for humans
- 99 die before birth
- Newborns die soon after birth
46Nondisjunction (Down-XXX, Turner-X, and
Klinefelter-XXY Syndromes)
n 1
n 1
n - 1
chromosome alignments at metaphase I
n - 1
nondisjunction at anaphase I
alignments at metaphase II
anaphase II
Figure 12.17Page 208
47Down Syndrome (nondisjunction)
- Trisomy of chromosome 21 (XXX)
- Mental impairment and a variety of additional
defects (heart defects, respiratory and digestive
problems) - With good medical care, can live to age 55
- Can be detected before birth
- Risk of Down syndrome increases dramatically in
mothers over age 35
48Turner Syndrome (nondisjunction)
- Inheritance of only one X (XO)
- 98 spontaneously aborted
- Survivors are short, infertile females
- No functional ovaries
- Secondary sexual traits reduced
- May be treated with hormones, surgery
49Klinefelter Syndrome
- XXY or XXXY condition
- Results mainly from nondisjunction in mother
(67) - Phenotype is tall, overweight males
- Sterile or nearly so
- Feminized traits (sparse facial hair, somewhat
enlarged breasts) - Treated with testosterone injections
50XYY Condition (nondisjunction)
- Taller than average males
- Most otherwise phenotypically normal
- Some mentally impaired
- Once thought to be predisposed to criminal
behavior, but studies now discredit (no double
blind studies same investigator for processing
karyotypes and personal histories)
51Nondisjunction Disorder Summary
XXY
XX
x
Y
(Klinefelter syndrome)
gamete
XX
or
XXX
XX
X
x
(metafemale)
nondisjunction
XX
YO
O
x
Y
(not viable)
or
O
gamete
XO
O
X
x
(Turner syndrome)
meiosis and gamete formation
possibilities at fertilization
genotype (phenotype)
52 Phenotypic Treatments
- Symptoms of many genetic disorders can be
minimized or suppressed by - Dietary controls (phenylketonuria (PKU avoid
products with aspartame reduce intake of
phenylalanine), diabetes, and galactosemia) - Adjustments to environmental conditions
(albinism, sickle-cell anemia) - Surgical treatments (cleft lip or palate)
- Hormonal treatments (Turner and Klinefelter
Syndromes)
53 Genetic Screening
- Large-scale screening programs detect affected
persons - Newborns in United States routinely tested for
PKU - Early detection allows dietary intervention and
prevents brain impairment
54Prenatal Diagnosis
- Amniocentesis fluid sampled from amnion
sloughed fetal cells - Chorionic villus sampling chorion (sac
surrounding the amnion) cells sampled - Fetoscopy fiberoptic device can diagnose
sickle-cell anemia and hemophilia - All methods have some miscarriage risks
55Animation
Amniocentesis animation.
Click to view animation.
56Preimplantation Diagnosis
- Used with in-vitro fertilization
- Mitotic divisions produce ball of 8 cells
(embryo) - All cells have same genes
- One of the cells is removed and its genes
analyzed - If cell has no defects, the embryo is implanted
in uterus