Title: The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
1The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
2New knowledge confirms Mendels principles
- 1890 Cell biologists understand process of
meiosis. - 1902 Confirmed that chromosomes are paired in
diploid cells, and that they separate in meiosis. - Biologists develop the chromosome theory of
inheritance - Mendels factors, now genes are located
on chromosomes. - Chromosomes segregate and independently
assort during gamete formation. - Important work started in 1910 by Thomas Hunt
Morgan from Columbia University who performed
experiments with the fruit fly Drosophila
melanogaster These flies - Are easily cultured in the laboratory (live in
small jars can be anesthetized). - Are prolific breeders (100s of eggs laid).
- Have a short generation time (10 days).
- Have only four pairs of chromosomes which are
easily seen with a microscope.
3An exception to Mendels rule
- Linked genes -- Genes located on the same
chromosome, which do not indepedently assort and
tend to be inherited together. - B normal body color b black body
- W normal wing shape w vestigial wing
- BbWw x bbww ? 1 norm/norm 1 norm/vest 1
black/norm 1 black/vest (expected) - BbWw x bbww ? 5 norm/norm 1 norm/vest 1
black/norm 5 black/vest
(observed) - Sturtevant hypothesized that probability of
crossing over between two genes is directly
proportional to the distance between them. - He used recombination frequencies between genes
to assign them a linear position on a chromosome
map. - One map unit 1 recombination frequency genes
farthest apart have highest recombination
frequency.
4Discovery of a Sex-Linked Gene
- Sex-linked genes -- Genes located on sex
chromosomes, commonly applied only to genes on
the X chromosome. - Morgan discovered a male fly with white eyes
instead of the wild-type red eyes. Morgan mated
this mutant white-eyed male with a red-eyed
female. - w white-eye allele
- w red-eye or wild-type allele
- P generation Xw Xw x Xw Y
- F1 generation Xw Xw and Xw Y (all
red-eyed) - F2 generation Xw Xw and Xw Xw (all
females red-eyed) - Xw Y and Xw Y
(half males red half males white) - Morgans conclusions
- If eye color is located only on the X chromosome,
then females (XX) carry two copies of the gene,
while males (XY) have only one. - Since the mutant allele is recessive, a
white-eyed female must have that allele on both X
chromosomes (impossible in this case). - A white-eyed male has no wild-type allele to mask
the recessive mutant allele, so a single copy
results in white eyes.
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6Sex-Linked Disorders in Humans
- Color blindness, Duchenne muscular dystrophy,
hemophilia. - Human X-chromosome is much larger than the Y
more genes on the X, many without a homologous
loci on the Y. - Fathers pass X-linked alleles to only and all of
their daughters. - Males receive their X chromosome only from their
mothers. - Fathers cannot pass X-linked traits to their
sons. - Mothers can pass X-linked alleles to both sons
and daughters. - A female that is heterozygous for the trait can
be a carrier, but not show the recessive trait
herself far more males than females have
sex-linked disorders. - Males are said to be hemizygous (having only one
copy of a gene in a diploid organism).
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8Sex-Limited/Sex-Influenced Traits
- Autosomal traits which affect one gender more
than the other. - A dominant gene causes a rare type of uterine
cancer, but only affects women. - A form of baldness also caused by a dominant gene
usually only affects men because of hormone
levels.
9X Inactivation in Females
- In female mammals, most diploid cells have only
one fully functional X chromosome one of the 2
chromosomes is inactivated during embryonic
development. - Inactive X chromosome condenses into an object
called a Barr body most Barr body genes are not
expressed. - Barr bodies are highly methylated compared to
active DNA Methyl groups (-CH3) attach to
cytosine. - Female mammals are a mosaic of two types of
cells, one with an active X from the father and
one with an active X from the mother
inactivation appears to happen randomly. - Examples of this type of mosaicism are coloration
in calico cats.
10Humans Fragile X, muscular dystrophies, patchy
skin discoloration
11Genetic Disorders Alterations of Chromosome
Number
- Aneuploidy -- having an abnormal number of
certain chromosomes. - Three copies of a chromosome is called trisomy
(Downs Syndrome, or Trisomy 21) missing a
chromosome is called monosomy (Turners
Syndrome). - Polyploidy -- more than two complete chromosome
sets. - Triploidy means three haploid chromosome sets
(3N) may be produced by fertilization of an
abnormal diploid egg. - Tetraploidy means four haploid chromosome sets
(4N) may result by mitosis without cytokinesis. - Polyploidy is common in plants, but occurs rarely
in animals. - Nondisjunction -- error in meiosis when
homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids fail
to separate into different gametes.
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13Genetic Disorders Alterations of Chromosome
Number(cont)
- Aneuploidy usually prevents normal embryonic
development and often results in spontaneous
abortion. - Some types cause less severe problems.
- Down syndrome (1 in 700 live births in U.S.)
characteristic facial features, short stature,
heart defects, mental retardation. - Correlates with maternal age time lag prior to
completion of meiosis at ovulation? - Rarer disorders are Patau syndrome (trisomy 13)
and Edwards syndrome (trisomy 18) incompatable
with life. - Sex chromosome aneuploidy
- Klinefelter Syndrome (usually XXY) sterile males
with feminine body characteristics. - Extra Y (or super-male , XYY) taller males
with higher testosterone production. - Turner Syndrome (XO) only known viable human
monosomy short stature sexual characteristics
fail to develop sterile.
14Genetic Disorders Alterations of Chromosome
Structure
- Chromosome breakage can alter chromosome
structure in four ways - 1. Deletion loss of a fragment of chromosome.
- 2. Duplication lost fragment attaches to a
homologous chromosome, repeating a sequence. - 3. Translocation lost fragment joins to a
nonhomologous chromosome. - 4. Inversion lost fragment reattaches to the
original chromosome in reverse. - These errors usually happen during crossing-over.
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17Genetic Disorders Alterations of Chromosome
Structure(cont)
- Cri du chat syndrome deletion on chromosome
mental retardation, unusual facial features, and
cats cry. - Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) portion of
chromosome 22 switches places with fragment from
chromosome 9. - Some cases of Down syndrome the third chromosome
21 translocates to chromosome 15. - Prader-Willi syndrome deletion from the paternal
chromosome 15 mental retardation, obesity, short
stature. - Angelman syndrome same deletion from the
maternal chromosome 15 uncontrollable
spontaneous laughter, jerky movements, and other
mental symptoms. - Genomic imprinting -- changes in chromosomes
inherited from males and females certain genes
expressed differently depending upon whether
inherited from the ovum or from the sperm cell.
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19Genetic Disorders Alterations of Chromosome
Structure(cont)
- Fragile X syndrome (1 in 1500 males 1 in 2500
females) most common genetic cause of mental
retardation. - Caused by triplet repeat (CGG) repeated up to 50
times on the tip of a normal X chromosome
repeated more than 200 times in a fragile X
chromosome. - Syndrome more likely to appear if the abnormal X
chromosome is inherited from the mother
chromosomes in ova are more likely to acquire new
CGG triplets than chromosomes in sperm. - Maternal imprinting explains why fragile-X
disorder is more common in males. Males (XY)
inherit the fragile X chromosome only from their
mothers. - Heterozygous carrier females are usually only
mildly retarded.
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