Title: Genes and Behavior
1Genes and Behavior
2Nature vs Nurture
- Nature
- Genetic component
- Nurture
- Environmental
3Nature
- Genetic constraints on development of recognition
- Sensitive period of exposure to model
- Learning triggered by specific stimuli (ex.
Movement or sound) - Learning is rapid and long lasting
- Learning is apparently irreversible
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1yGFrV88t1cfeature
related
4Nature vs NurtureThe story of a White crowned
sparrow
5Whats a dialect?
- A regional or social variety of a language
distinguished by pronunciation, grammar, or
vocabulary
6The Phenomena
http//researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/bma
mmals/sparrows/sparrows2.html
7Is it Nature?
8White Crowned Sparrow Song Variation
- Different populations of birds have distinctively
different song dialects - Are different dialects caused by different genes?
http//psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fabuy.optionToBu
yid2001-01020-008
9Is it Nurture?
- White Crowned sparrows were placed in a chamber
isolated from sounds - Isolated birds were unable to produce a complete
song, only twitters - Conclusion- a critical environmental factor was
missing
10Next Stage of Birdie Torture
- White Crowned sparrows were placed in a chamber
and adult song played to them - Birds closely mimicked song that was played to
them - Berkeley bird would sing San Francisco song
- What does this tell us about bird song dialects?
11- Hearing bird song of same species stimulates gene
expression in brain - Proteins synthesized modify the functions of
brain cells - Alters birds ability to remember song
12(No Transcript)
13Nucleic acids
- Information storage molecules
- Directions for building proteins
- Found in nuclei of eukaryotes
- Two forms
- Deoxyribonucleic acid
- Ribonucleic acid
- Polymers of nucleotides
14Nucleotides
- Nucleotides are the building blocks of nucleic
acids - Nitrogenous base
- Adenine
- Guanine
- Cytosine
- Thymine (DNA only)
- Uracil (RNA only)
15Information stored in Sequence of Nucleotides
16DNA
- Located in the nucleus of cells
- Has the capacity to store genetic information
- Instructions for all life and life processes
- Contains protein building instructions
- blueprint of life
- Can be copied and passed from generation to
generation - Uses specific code built into sequence of
nucleotides
17DNA Replication is Semiconservative
18Chromatin vs Chromosomes
19Genetic code
- Genes have nucleotide code for building proteins
- Proteins are made of amino acids
- The set of rules giving the correspondence
between nucleotides of nucleic acids and amino
acids of proteins
20Genes Located on Chromosomes
- Gene
- Sequence of nucleotides that is the unit of
hereditary information - Ie. A recipe
- Genome
- The sum of an individuals genes
21Gene Expression
- How dnas instructions are carried out
- Code in gene is copied and used to build
proteins or run other jobs - Involves multiple steps
- transcription
- translation
- Uses dna and rna
22 In animal and plant Cells DNA is Isolated in
the Nucleus
Protein Building Structures in cytoplasm
23Transcription vs translation
- Transcription
- Translation
- Transcription occurs in the nucleus
- Translation occurs in the cytoplasm
- This is how genes control the structures and
activities of cells
24Transcription
- Converts Dna to rna
- Results in strand of messenger rna (template)
- Uses Complementary base pair rule
- Region of copying unwinds then rewinds after
mrna is complete
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26Messenger RNA (mRNA)
- RNA Template of DNA
- Single strand of nucleotides
- Moves from inside nucleus to cytoplasm
27Translation
- Converts from nucleic acid (nucleotide) language
to the protein language (amino acid) - Converts mRNA to protein
28Ribosomes Help build proteins
29Protein Builds your Body
30Protein Runs your BodyProteins Can Change Cell
Functions
31Changes in Cell Activity Can Lead to Changes in
Behavior
32Honey Bee Caste
33Queen
- Reproductive female
- Lays eggs
34Workers
- Maintain hive
- Sterile with un-functional gonads
- Care of larvae hatched from Queens eggs
- Nurse workers
- Construct honeycomb
- Regulate hives temperature
- Defense of colony from predators and parasites
- Collection of pollen and nectar
35Development of Workers Role
- Begins as a honeycomb cleaner after hatching
- Nurse bee- feeds honey to larvae
- Distributes food to workers
- Forages for pollen and nectar outside the hive
- (approx 3 weeks)
- What regulates this change in behaviors?
36Variation in Gene Expression Influences Behavior
- Comparison of gene activity from nurse and worker
bees - 2000 genes change their activity within the first
4 days of a bees life - Comparison of 4 day old bees and 8 day old bees
showed 600 additional genes exhibited altered
activity - Differences in gene activity contribute to
developmental changes occurring in brains of the
bees
37Social Environment Influences Gene Expression
- Presence of older foragers inhibits young from
maturing into foragers - Transfer of chemicals (ethyl oleate) from
foragers when regurgitating nectar to nurses
inhibits transition into forager
38Gene Expression is a Complex Process
- It is not solely dependent on whether a gene is
active or not - Genes and the environment have a complex
interaction in driving phenotypes and behavior
39- The one geneone protein hypothesis states that
the function of an individual gene is to dictate
the production of a specific protein
40Genes are made of Introns exons
- Exons
- Segments of DNA that code for AA
- Introns
- Sections of nucleotides that do not code for AA
- Regulatory function
41mRNA Is Processed
- mRNA processing can influence gene expression
- MRNA is spliced (cut paste)
- Introns removed
- MRNA ends are capped
42mRNA Is Spliced
43Rna processing
44(No Transcript)
45mRna splicing is an example of Epigenetics
46Epigenetics
- The study of changes in phenotype caused by
mechanisms that influence gene expression without
effecting the underlying genes - Results as a consequence of DNA methylation or
histone acetylation - Suppress gene expression without altering the
silenced genes
47(No Transcript)
48Factors that influence Epigenome
- Development in utero
- Environmental chemicals
- Drugs/ pharmaceuticals
- Aging
- Diet
49Consequences of Epigenetics
- Mechanism to cause changes in phenotype or
behavior independent of genotype - Can result in changes of phenotype
- Can result in changes in behavior
- Can result in health effects
50Epigenome can be inherited
- Methylated regions of DNA are copied when a cell
replicates - Cell memory
- Parents may contribute their epigenome to
offspring
51Epigenetics Influenced by Diet
- Compounds in food sources are extracted by the
body - Compounds are modified metabolically to build
molecules necessary for building and running the
body - Some of these molecules are used to make
epigenetic tags that interact with DNA to silence
genes - Ex. Methyl groups
52Epigenetics and Diet
- Honey bees
- Complex social groups made up of
- 1 Queen, workers, drones
- Queen is the only reproductive individual
- Reproduction is asexual so all other members of
the hive are identical clones - How does phenotypic behavioral variation occur?
53Epigenetics and Diet
- Royal jelly
- Protein rich substance secreted by pharyngeal
glands of worker bee - Larva destined to become a queen is fed large
quantities of royal jelly by worker bees (nurse)
54Epigenetics and Diet
- Royal jelly diet interacts with genes
- Royalactin
- Royal jelly silences Dnmt3 gene
- Dnmt3 gene codes for a protein involved in
genome-wide gene silencing - When Dnmt3 is active it silences genes in bee
larva and inhibits them from developing into a
queen - Royal Jelly consumed by queen be inactivates the
Dnmt3 gene so genes can remain active and result
in queen characteristics - Effects morphology, physiology, life span and
behavior
55Allows Queen Morphology to Develop
- Queen develops functional ovaries and a larger
abdomen for laying egg
56Allows Queen Behavior to Develop
- Queen behaviors
- Egg laying behaviors
- Kills rival queens
- Produce communication sounds
- piping
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v8BWaNwsq3mQfeature
related - Pheromone production
- Mandibular gland
- Influences gene expression in worker bee brains
- Mating flights
- Mates with drones from another colony
- Average 12
57Epigenetics and DietWhat happens if your diet is
poor in
58In adults changes are reversible
- Switching to a diet rich in methyl donating
molecules can promote Methylation of genome
59Epigenetics and Embryonic Development
- Mothers diets deficient in methyl-donating folate
or choline during late fetal or early post natal
causes portions of genome to be under-methylated
for life
60Epigenetics and Embryonic Development
- Unmethylated agouti gene results in a yellow
coat. Prone to disease. - Methylated gene results in brown color and low
risk of disease
61Toxin Exposure and Epigenome
- Bisphenol A (BPA) is a compound used in making
polycarbonate plastic (ex. Water bottle and tin
cans) - Exposed yellow agouti mothers produced more
unhealthy offspring than normal - Methyl rich diet helped counteract negative
effects of exposure
62Center for Disease Control
- BPAs toxic effects in lab experiments are on
rise - Compare to rates of same diseases in humans (left)
63Epigenetics of twins
- http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/epigenetics.html
64Sources
- http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/epigenetics
/nutrition/ - http//www.genomeweb.com/dna-methylation-involved-
epigenetics-crown-queen-bee