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GENETICS

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Title: GENETICS


1
GENETICS
2
GENETICS
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

3
GENETICS
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

4
DNA and chromosomes
  • Long DNA molecules (millions of base pairs long)
    in nucleus are called chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is organized and packaged or
    wrapped up with proteins giving it a certain
    shape
  • In humans, 23 pairs of chromosomes
  • 1 of each pair from mother
  • 1 of each pair from father
  • Total view of all 23 pairs is called karyotype

5
Mitosiscell division
  • Why do cells divide?
  • Growthso tissues/structures can become larger
  • Replacementmany tissues are constantly being
    replaced because they get worn out or used up.
    E.g. blood, skin, lining of gut, sperm
  • Repairwhen tissues get damaged due to injury

6
Mitosiswhat happens (overview)
  • DNA/chrosomes replicate (make exact copies
  • Copies line up at center of cell
  • Copies pulled to opposite ends of cells by
    centromeres/spindles
  • Cell membrane pinches off and splits cell into two

7
Mitosisdetails/stages
1. Prophase
3. Anaphase
4. Telophase
2. Metaphase
8
1. Mitosis Prophase
  • Chromosomes condense and become visible
  • Nuclear envelope fragments
  • Nucleolus disappears
  • Centrosomes move to opposite poles
  • Spindle fibers appear and attach to the
    centromere

9
2. Mitosis Metaphase
  • Chromosomes line up at the middle of the cell
    (equator)
  • Fully formed spindle

10
3. Mitosis Anaphase
  • Sister chromatids separate at the centromeres and
    move towards the poles

11
4. MitosisTelophase and cytokinesis
  • Chromosomes arrive at the poles
  • Chromosomes become indistinct chromatin again
  • Nucleoli reappear
  • Spindle disappears
  • Nuclear envelope reassembles
  • Two daughter cells are formed by a ring of actin
    filaments (cleavage furrow)

12
Mitosisconstant, fast, keeps body functioning
  • Remember, mitosis produces two identical daughter
    cells
  • Mitosis is constantly happening in your body to
    allow for growth, replacement and repair
  • While you read this slide, millions of new cells
    were produced by mitosis in the tissues of your
    body!
  • Dont forget cellular scale and intelligenceits
    a whole planet happening at the sub-microscopic
    level

13
GENETICS
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

14
Chrosomes
  • REVIEW Each chromosome is a single DNA molecule
    wrapped up within a special group of proteins
    giving it a particular shape

15
DNA is structured to replicate
  • DNA is double helixtwo complementary strands
    wound in a spiral
  • Strands separate and DNA replicates by filling in
    other half of each separated strand
  • Famous Watson-Crick model (Nobel prize)

16
DNA replicates to pass on information (to
daughter cells in mitosis)
17
DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
metabolism
  • DNA is transcribed to mRNA
  • mRNA is translated to amino acid sequence
  • Amino acid sequence folds up into protein
  • Proteins catalyze reactions of cell metabolism
  • This process is called gene expressionthe
    information in one region of the DNAa geneis
    being expressed so that the cells metabolism can
    function

18
2 steps of gene expression
  • Transcription DNA is read to make a mRNA in the
    nucleus of our cells
  • Translation Reading the mRNA to make a protein
    in the cytoplasm

19
Transcription
  • Happens in nucleus
  • DNA double helix opens up
  • mRNA transcript is made from DNA template

20
Translation
  • Happens outside nucleus
  • Ribosomes (special RNA particles or organelles)
    do the translation
  • They glom onto mRNA and line up amino acids
    according to mRNA sequence (see next slide for
    code

21
RNA-protein translation code
  • Every three RNA bases codes for one amino acid
  • This code is very evolutionary conservativeworks
    almost the same in all forms of life

22
Overview of transcription and translation
REMEMBER A particular region of DNA that has
the code to make a particular protein is called a
gene.
Details in web link video animations
23
How does cell decide when to activate which genes
to produce what proteins?
  • DNA must be unpackaged and uncoiled in order to
    be transcribed to mRNA
  • Lampbrush chromosome shows loops of DNA that are
    being transcribed
  • What determines which regions or genes are going
    to be transcribed and translated?
  • This is called regulation of gene expression

24
Regulation of gene expression
  • Gene expression is regulatednot all genes are
    constantly active and having their protein
    produced
  • The regulation or feedback on gene expression is
    how the cells metabolism is controlled.
  • This regulation can happen in different ways
  • 1. Transcriptional control (in nucleus)
  • e.g. chromatin density and transcription factors
  • 2. Posttranscriptional control (nucleus)
  • e.g. mRNA processing
  • 3. Translational control (cytoplasm)
  • e.g. Differential ability of mRNA to bind
    ribosomes
  • 4. Posttranslational control (cytoplasm)
  • e.g. changes to the protein to make it functional
  • When regulation of gene expression goes
    wrongcancer!

25
DNA technology
  • Recombinant DNA
  • DNA sequencing and Human Genome Project
  • Genetic Engineering

NOTE This is probably going to be the century
for biological technology. What weve done with
smart silicon systems will soon seem like nothing
compared to what we will do with smart
carbon/life-based systems. The technologies to
understand, build, manipulate and control DNA,
protein and cellular systems have been growing
for the last fifty years and will undoubtedly
keep doing so. Please view the web links and do
the ethical issue essay for this part of the
course. I think youll find the DNA technologies
and our ability to manipulate cell metabolism
fascinating!
26
GENETICS
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

27
Characteristics of cancer cells
  • Lack differentiation and do not contribute to
    body functioning
  • Have abnormal nuclei that are enlarged and may
    have an abnormal number of chromosomes
  • Unlimited ability to divide
  • one way is through turning on the telomerase gene
    that allows telomeres on chromosomes to
    continually be built thus allowing a cell to
    divide over and over again
  • Form tumors
  • Benign tumors are usually encapsulated and do not
    invade adjacent tissue while a cancerous tumor
    usually is not encapsulated and eventually
    invades surrounding tissue
  • Can divide without growth factors
  • Become abnormal gradually through a multistage
    process
  • Undergo angiogenesis and metastasis

28
The 3 phases in the development of cancer cells
  • Initiation a single cell undergoes a mutation
    that causes it to divide repeatedly
  • Promotion a tumor develops and cells within the
    tumor mutate
  • Progression a cell mutates in such a way that
    allows it to invade surrounding tissue

29
The genetic basis for cancer
  • Proto-oncogenes products promote the cell cycle
    and prevent cell death (apoptosis)
  • Tumor-suppressor genes products inhibit the
    cell cycle and promote apoptosis
  • Mutations in the genes above can cause cancer, in
    fact proto-oncogenes that have mutated are
    cancer-causing genes called oncogenes

30
Comparing these genes in normal and cancer cells
31
Types of cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Oncology study of cancer
  • Carcinomas cancers of the epithelial tissue
  • Adenocarcinomas cancers of glandular epithelial
    cells
  • Sarcomas cancers of muscle and connective
    tissues
  • Leukemias cancers of the blood
  • Lymphoma cancers of lymphatic tissues

32
Causes of cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Genetics
  • Environmental carcinogens
  • Radiation
  • Environmental carcinogens (tobacco smoke and
    pollutants)
  • Viruses

33
Genetic causes of cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Examples of genes associated with cancer
  • BRCA1 and BRCA2 tumor-suppressor genes that are
    associated with breast cancer
  • RB a tumor-suppressor gene that is associated
    with an eye tumor
  • RET proto-oncogene that is associated with
    thyroid cancer
  • Mutations of these genes predispose individuals
    to certain cancers but it takes at least one more
    acquired mutation during their lifetime to
    develop cancer

34
Environmental causes of cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Radiation
  • Environmental factors such as UV light (in
    sunlight or tanning lights) and x-rays can cause
    mutation in DNA
  • Organic chemicals
  • Tobacco smoke increases cancer of lungs, mouth,
    larynx and others
  • Pollutants substances such as metals, dust,
    chemicals and pesticides increase the risk of
    cancer
  • Viruses
  • Hepatitis B C virus that can cause liver
    cancer
  • Epstein-Barr virus can cause Burkitts lymphoma
  • Human papillomavirus can cause cervical cancer

35
Seven warning signs of cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Change in bowel or bladder habits
  • A sore that does not heal
  • Unusual bleeding or discharge
  • Thickening or lump in breast or elsewhere
  • Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing
  • Obvious change in wart or mole
  • Nagging cough or hoarseness

36
Some routine screening tests for cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Self-examination monthly exams of breasts and
    testicles starting at age 20
  • Colonoscopy every 5 years starting at age 50
  • Mammogram yearly after age 40
  • Pap smear should begin these 3 years after
    vaginal intercourse or no later than age 21

37
Health Focus Self exams
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
38
Detecting skin cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • A asymmetry
  • B border is irregular
  • C color varies from one area to another
  • D diameter is larger than 6mm

39
Other ways to detect cancer
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Tumor marker tests blood tests for tumor
    antigens/antibodies
  • CEA (carcinoembryonic antigen) antigen can be
    detected in someone with colon cancer
  • PSA (prostate-specific antigen) test for prostate
    cancer
  • Genetic tests tests for mutations in
    proto-oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes
  • RET gene (thyroid cancer)
  • P16 gene (associated with melanoma)
  • BRCA1 (breast cancer)
  • A diagnosis of cancer can be confirmed by
    performing a biopsy

40
Standard cancer treatments
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Surgery removal of small cancers
  • Radiation therapy localized therapy that causes
    chromosomal breakage and disrupts the cell cycle
  • Chemotherapy drugs that treat the whole body
    that kills cells by damaging their DNA or
    interfering with DNA synthesis
  • Bone marrow transplants transplant bone marrow
    from one individual to another

41
Newer cancer therapies
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Immunotherapy inject immune cells that are
    genetically engineered to bear the tumors
    antigens
  • Passive immunotherapy antibodies that are
    linked to radioactive isotopes or
    chemotherapeutic drugs are injected into the body
  • p53 gene therapy a retrovirus in clinical trial
    that is injected into the body where it will
    infect and kill only tumor cells (cells that lack
    p53 tumor cells)
  • Angiogenesis inhibition - Angiostatin and
    endostatin are drugs in clinical trials that
    appear to inhibit angiogenesis

42
Bioethical focus Control of tobacco
CANCER QUICK COURSEWHAT CAN YOU DO TO
PREVENT/TREAT?
  • Food for thought
  • Smoking diminishes the health of the smoker and
    damages nearly every major organ
  • Within minutes of smoking, a smokers body begins
    to heal
  • Smoking low-tar or low-nicotine is no different
    than smoking any other cigarette
  • The tobacco industry targets young people (9 out
    of 10 smokers start before age 18)
  • It is the single most preventable cause of death
    and disease in the US
  • Give your thoughts
  • Who should pay for the medical bills associated
    with smoking?
  • Should the government prevent the sale of tobacco
    or leave it up to the individual?

43
GENETICS
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

44
How are genetic traits combined and passed on
from parent to offspring
  • Meiosis produces gametes or sex cells (eggs and
    sperm) with just one member of each chromosome
    pair
  • Fertilization results in union of female gamete
    (egg) with male gamete (sperm)
  • Subsequent embryonic, fetal and embryonic
    development by mitosis and differentiation of
    cell types produces new individual

45
18.3 Meiosis
Overview of meiosis
  • Two nuclear divisions occur to make 4 haploid
    cells (cells with just one member of each
    chromosome pair)
  • Meiosis results in gametes (egg and sperm)
  • Has 8 phases (4 in each meiosis I II)

46
Alleles
  • A particular gene, or protein-coding region of
    DNA along a chromosome might have a few different
    variations, called alleles
  • The combination of alleles, at a particular gene,
    or chromosome region, that you get from your
    mother and father determine your hereditary
    traits
  • Please see the Dragon Genetics lab to understand
    this (in online lab links for this section)

47
Fertilization
  • After meiosis, male and female gametes (sperm and
    egg) unite to form a new cella zygotethat has
    the full set of 23 pairs of chromosomes.

48
Embryonic developmentmitosis produces
tissues/structures of adult
49
(No Transcript)
50
Some adult features are coded for genetically in
alleles or gene varieties of sperm and egg
Be sure to see sickle cell anemia example in Web
Links for this section of the course
51
Inheritance and Natural Selection
  • Some combinations of alleles, produced during
    meiosis and fertilization might be more
    advantageous
  • This is what leads to natural selection.
    Individuals with more advantageous traits will
    survive to reproduce and pass on those traits.
  • Darwin realized that slow changes in inherited
    traits, due to natural selection produced the
    great evolutinoary history of life.
  • Before his synthesis of all the evidence, no one
    could make sense of living systems. Now,
    Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the
    Light of Evolution
  •                                     --Theodosius
    Dobzhansky

Please do the Coyote Lab to see how meiosis,
fertilization, inheritance and natural selection
all work together to produce the gradual change
in biological organisms that we call evolution.
You can download this lab from the Online Lab
links for this section of the course.
52
(No Transcript)
53
GENETICS
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

54
GENETICS (review)
  • Cells divide and pass on instructions coded in
    DNA of chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is a huge DNA molecule with coded
    information
  • DNA replicates to pass on information
  • DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
    metabolism
  • Cancerexample of what happens when genetic
    control goes awry
  • Normal inheritance and meiosis

55
DNA and chromosomes
  • Long DNA molecules (millions of base pairs long)
    in nucleus are called chromosomes
  • Each chromosome is organized and packaged or
    wrapped up with proteins giving it a certain
    shape
  • In humans, 23 pairs of chromosomes
  • 1 of each pair from mother
  • 1 of each pair from father
  • Total view of all 23 pairs is called karyotype

56
Mitosiswhat happens (overview)
  • DNA/chrosomes replicate (make exact copies
  • Copies line up at center of cell
  • Copies pulled to opposite ends of cells by
    centromeres/spindles
  • Cell membrane pinches off and splits cell into two

57
Mitosisconstant, fast, keeps body functioning
  • Remember, mitosis produces two identical daughter
    cells
  • Mitosis is constantly happening in your body to
    allow for growth, replacement and repair
  • While you read this slide, millions of new cells
    were produced by mitosis in the tissues of your
    body!
  • Dont forget cellular scale and intelligenceits
    a whole planet happening at the sub-microscopic
    level

58
DNA is structured to replicate
  • DNA is double helixtwo complementary strands
    wound in a spiral
  • Strands separate and DNA replicates by filling in
    other half of each separated strand
  • Famous Watson-Crick model (Nobel prize)

59
DNA is transcribed to make proteins that run cell
metabolism
  • DNA is transcribed to mRNA
  • mRNA is translated to amino acid sequence
  • Amino acid sequence folds up into protein
  • Proteins catalyze reactions of cell metabolism
  • This process is called gene expressionthe
    information in one region of the DNAa geneis
    being expressed so that the cells metabolism can
    function

60
Overview of transcription and translation
REMEMBER A particular region of DNA that has
the code to make a particular protein is called a
gene.
Details in web link video animations
61
Regulation of gene expression
  • Gene expression is regulatednot all genes are
    constantly active and having their protein
    produced
  • The regulation or feedback on gene expression is
    how the cells metabolism is controlled.
  • This regulation can happen in different ways
  • 1. Transcriptional control (in nucleus)
  • e.g. chromatin density and transcription factors
  • 2. Posttranscriptional control (nucleus)
  • e.g. mRNA processing
  • 3. Translational control (cytoplasm)
  • e.g. Differential ability of mRNA to bind
    ribosomes
  • 4. Posttranslational control (cytoplasm)
  • e.g. changes to the protein to make it functional
  • When regulation of gene expression goes
    wrongcancer!

62
How are genetic traits combined and passed on
from parent to offspring
  • Meiosis produces gametes or sex cells (eggs and
    sperm) with just one member of each chromosome
    pair
  • Fertilization results in union of female gamete
    (egg) with male gamete (sperm)
  • Subsequent embryonic, fetal and embryonic
    development by mitosis and differentiation of
    cell types produces new individual

63
Fertilization
  • After meiosis, male and female gametes (sperm and
    egg) unite to form a new cella zygotethat has
    the full set of 23 pairs of chromosomes.

64
Inheritance and Natural Selection
  • Some combinations of alleles, produced during
    meiosis and fertilization might be more
    advantageous
  • This is what leads to natural selection.
    Individuals with more advantageous traits will
    survive to reproduce and pass on those traits.
  • Darwin realized that slow changes in inherited
    traits, due to natural selection produced the
    great evolutinoary history of life.
  • Before his synthesis of all the evidence, no one
    could make sense of living systems. Now,
    Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the
    Light of Evolution
  •                                     --Theodosius
    Dobzhansky

Please do the Coyote Lab to see how meiosis,
fertilization, inheritance and natural selection
all work together to produce the gradual change
in biological organisms that we call evolution.
You can download this lab from the Online Lab
links for this section of the course.
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