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Chapter 11 Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity

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Title: Chapter 11 Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity


1
Chapter 11 Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity
  • 11.1 Basic Patterns of Human Inheritance

2
Recessive Genetic Disorders
  • Mendels work went unnoticed by the scientific
    community for about 30 years then it was
    rediscovered in the early 1900s.
  • At that time many scientists were interested in
    the cause of diseases and noticed that some
    diseases ran in families.
  • Alkaptonuria was the first identified (recessive)
    genetic disorder. Alkaptonuria, from an enzyme
    deficiency, causes black acidic urine and later
    in life affects bones and joints.

3
Recessive Genetic Disorders
  • A recessive trait is expressed when the
    individual is homozygous recessive for the trait.
  • Both parents would need to have at least one
    recessive allele.
  • Usually the parents are heterozygous (carriers)
    for the disorder.

4
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5
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Affects the mucus-producing glands, digestive
    enzymes, and sweat glands
  • Chloride ions are not absorbed into the cells of
    a person with cystic fibrosis but are excreted in
    the sweat.
  • Without sufficient chloride ions in the cells, a
    thick mucus is secreted

6
Cystic Fibrosis
7
Cystic Fibrosis
8
Albinism
  • Caused by altered genes, resulting in the absence
    of the skin pigment melanin in hair and eyes
  • White hair.
  • Very pale skin
  • Pink pupils

9
Albinism
10
Tay-Sachs Disease
  • Caused by the absence of the enzymes responsible
    for breaking down fatty acids called gangliosides
  • Gangliosides accumulate in the brain, inflating
    brain nerve cells and causing mental
    deterioration.
  • Death by age 2

11
Dominant Genetic Disorders
99.9 of population is homozygous recessive for
achondroplasia
12
Huntingtons Disease
  • Affects the nervous system
  • Latent disorder affects age 30 to 50
  • Gradual loss of brain function (holes in brain)
  • Genetic test available
  • Result of allele mutation at tip of chromosome 4

13
Achondroplasia
  • Most common form of dwarfism
  • 75 of individuals born to parents of average
    size, result of new mutation
  • Lethal spontaneous abortion in homozygous
    dominant genotype

14
Pedigree Analysis
15
Pedigree Analysis
  • Are females
  • Are males
  • Shaded in circles and squares are affected
    individuals
  • Roman Numerals (I IV) are generations
  • Lines across represent mating
  • Lines down represent offspring

16
Pedigree Analysis
  • Count the number of affected males and affected
    females. If most males and few or no females
    most likely sex linked trait.
  • Look at the affected individuals. If every
    individual with the trait has a parent with the
    trait then this trait is dominant. If
    non-affected parents produce an offspring with
    the trait then it is recessive.
  • Determine the phenotype and genotype of every
    individual

17
Pedigree Analysis
  • Count the number of affected males and affected
    females. If most males and few or no females
    most likely sex linked trait.
  • Look at the affected individuals. If every
    individual with the trait has a parent with the
    trait then this trait is dominant. If
    non-affected parents produce an offspring with
    the trait then it is recessive.
  • Determine the phenotype and genotype of every
    individual

18
Pedigree Analysis
  • Affected males 1
  • Affected females 2 (not sex linked)
  • No affected individual has parent with the trait,
    means recessive
  • All affected individuals would be homozygous
    recessive, aa
  • All parents of affected individuals would be
    heterozygous, Aa
  • Siblings of affected individuals would be
    heterozygous (Aa) or homozygous dominant (AA)

19
Pedigree Analysis
20
Chapter 11 Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity
  • 11.2 Complex Patterns of Inheritance

21
Incomplete Dominance
  • Many scientists repeated Mendels work expecting
    to get similar results with different species.
    Carl Correns crossed white snapdragons with red
    snapdragons
  • According to Mendelian genetics, results would
    have yielded 100 dominant phenotype (red or
    white)
  • Correns found 100 pink

22
Incomplete Dominance
  • Incomplete Dominance is the appearance of an
    intermediate phenotype
  • Both alleles are expressed producing both the red
    and white proteins which gives the appearance of
    pink

23
Codominance
  • Both phenotypes of the two homozygotes are
    expressed
  • See red and white (not pink)

24
Codominance
  • Both phenotypes of the two homozygotes are
    expressed
  • See red hairs and white hairs (not pink)

Roan Cattle
25
Codominance
  • Sickle cell disease most common genetic disorder
    in African Americans (1 in 400).
  • In heterozygous condition both normal (round) and
    sickle red blood cells are produced
  • Few disease symptoms in heterozygous individual

26
Codominance
  • Sickle cells do not effectively carry oxygen,
    cause blockage in blood vessels, pain and
    fatigue.
  • Heterozygous condition protects against malaria
    (see p.303)

27
Multiple Alleles
  • More than two alleles
  • Human blood groups have three alleles ABO
  • Blood Types Genotypes
  • A IA IA or IAi
  • B IB IB or IBi
  • AB IA IB
  • O ii
  • Both IA and IB are dominant to i and are
    codominant to each other

28
Multiple Alleles
  • Multiple alleles can demonstrate a hierarchy of
    dominance.
  • In rabbits, four alleles code for coat color C,
    cch, ch, and c.
  • C is dominant to cch, ch, and c.
  • cch is dominant to ch and c.
  • ch is dominant to c.
  • c is recessive to all

29
Multiple Alleles
Chinchilla
?
Albino
Light gray
Dark gray
Himalayan
30
Epistasis
  • Variety is the result of one allele hiding the
    effects of another allele.

eebb
eeB_
E_bb
E_B_
No dark pigment present in fur
Dark pigment present in fur
31
Sex Determination
  • Sex chromosomes determine an individuals gender.
  • Human males are XY females XX
  • Autosomes are the nonsex chromosomes
  • Humans have 22 pairs of autosomes

32
Dosage Compensation
  • The X chromosome is more than three times larger
    than the Y chromosome has more than three times
    more information
  • Females (XX) have two copies of this information
    while males (XY) have only one copy of the X
    chromosome
  • In females one of the X chromosomes stops
    working which X is a random event and becomes a
    Barr Body

33
Dosage Compensation
  • Barr bodies form from the inactivated extra X
    chromosome in females
  • Colors of the calico cat are caused by the random
    inactivation of a particular X chromosome (orange
    on one X and black on the other X chromosome)

34
Sex-Linked Traits
  • The X and Y chromosomes are not homologous (do
    not pair carry different information)
  • Males only have one X chromosome only one allele
    for each trait only need one recessive to show
    the trait
  • Males show the sex linked traits much more often
    than females

35
Sex-Linked Traits
  • Red Green Color Blindness
  • 8 of United States males affected
  • Red and green colors look like shades of brown
  • Are you color blind?

36
Sex-Linked Traits
  • Hemophilia is characterized by delayed blood
    clotting.
  • Common in Royal Families of Europe due to
    intermarriage

37
Polygenic Traits
  • Poly many genic genes
  • Many genes needed to determine a trait
  • Most human traits are polygenic

38
Environmental Influences
  • Environment has an influence on phenotype
  • Sunlight without enough sunlight most flowering
    plants do not bear flowers
  • Water many plants lose their leaves in response
    to lack of water.
  • others diet, exercise

39
Environmental Influences
  • Temperature Siamese cats tail, feet, ears and
    nose are dark in response to cooler temperatures
    the black pigment production is responsive to
    temperature

40
Twin Studies
  • Helps scientists separate genetic contributions
    from environmental contributions
  • Traits that appear frequently in identical twins
    are at least partially controlled by heredity.
  • Traits expressed differently in identical twins
    are strongly influenced by environment.
  • Interesting information from identical twins
    separated at birth in Minnesota Twin Studies

41
Chapter 11 Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity
  • 11.3 Chromosomes and Human Heredity

42
Karyotype Studies
  • Karyotype is a micrograph (picture) of
    chromosomes at metaphase arranged by size in
    homologous pairs.
  • Twenty-two pairs of autosomes are the same for
    males and females.
  • Males have one X chromosome and one Y chromosome
    (not paired) and females have two X chromosomes
    (paired).
  • Karyotypes are useful for detecting chromosome
    abnormalities

43
Karyotype Studies
Chromosome smear
Karyotype
44
Telomeres
  • Telomeres protective end caps on the chromosomes
    made of DNA and proteins.
  • Short repetitive nonessential DNA sequences
  • Prevent one chromosome form binding to another
    chromosome (not sticky)

45
Telomeres
  • Absolutely essential for chromosome function
  • Telomeres decrease in size (length) as an
    organism ages and may play a role in aging and
    cancer.
  • Cancer cells have increased length of telomeres
    compared to adult cells.
  • Telomere function is an intense field of research

46
Nondisjunction
  • Failure of chromosomes to separate during cell
    division
  • Results in one cell getting too many chromosomes
    and one cell not getting enough.
  • If nondisjunction occurs during meiosis the
    resulting gametes could form an organism with
    every cell having an incorrect chromosome number.

47
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48
Down Syndrome
  • Results of parental gamete nondisjunction
    resulting in trisomy (three chromosomes ) of
    chromosome 21.
  • Symptoms include mental retardation, distinctive
    facial features, short stature, heart defects,
    sexually underdeveloped, sterile, more likely to
    develop leukemia and Alzheimer's, shorter life
    span

49
Down Syndrome
50
Down Syndrome
  • Incidence of Down Syndrome increases with
    increasing age of the mother
  • Risk increases to 6 for mothers over age 45
  • Recommended fetal testing for mothers age 35 and
    older

51
Other Trisomys
  • Patau syndrome trisomy 13 1/5000 serious eye,
    brain and circulatory problems lifespan less
    than 1 year
  • Edwards syndrome trisomy 18 1/10,000 effects
    every body organ lifespan less than 1 year

52
Nondisjunction of Sex Chromosomes Male
  • Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) 1/2000 males sex
    organs, testes abnormally small sterile
    feminine body characteristics (breast
    enlargement, fat deposition) normal intelligence
  • (XYY) taller than average male not
    characterized by a syndrome some suggest
    increased aggression

53
Nondisjunction of Sex Chromosomes Female
  • (XXX) 1/1000 normal due to X inactivitation
    only distinguishable by karyotype
  • Turner syndrome Monosomy X (XO) 1/5000 female
    with no maturation of sex organs no secondary
    sex characteristics short sterile normal
    intelligence with spatial learning disabilities

54
Fetal Testing
  • Amniocentesis removal amniotic fluid with
    sloughed fetal cells at 14th -16th week for
    diagnosis of chromosomal abnormalities 1 risk
    of complications

55
Fetal Testing
  • Chorionic villus sampling removal of placental
    sample at 8th -10th week quicker results less
    accurate less than 1 risk of complications

56
Fetal Testing
  • Fetal blood sampling sample of fetal blood can
    detect increased number of genetic abnormalities
    medication can be given to fetus before birth
    greater risk to fetus
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