Title: Human Genetics
1Human Genetics
Chapter 15 The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
2Genes Chromosomes
- Mendels hereditary factors were genes, though
this wasnt known at the time - Today we can show that genes are located on
chromosomes - The location of a particular gene can be seen by
tagging isolated chromosomes with a fluorescent
dye that highlights the gene
3Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
- Mitosis and meiosis were first described in the
late 1800s - The chromosome theory of inheritance states
- Mendelian genes have specific loci (locations) on
chromosomes - Chromosomes undergo segregation and independent
assortment - The behavior of chromosomes during meiosis was
said to account for Mendels laws of segregation
and independent assortment
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5Experimental Evidence
- The first solid evidence associating a specific
gene with a specific chromosome came from Thomas
Hunt Morgan, an embryologist - Morgans experiments with fruit flies provided
convincing evidence that chromosomes are the
location of Mendels heritable factors
6Experimental Evidence
- In one experiment, Morgan mated male flies with
white eyes (mutant) with female flies with red
eyes (wild type or normal) - The F1 generation all had red eyes
- The F2 generation showed the 31 redwhite eye
ratio, but only males had white eyes - Morgan determined that the white-eyed mutant
allele must be located on the X chromosome - Morgans finding supported the chromosome theory
of inheritance
7Sex linkage
- Sex chromosomes determine gender of individual
- XX in females, XY in males
- Each ovum contains an X chromosome, while a sperm
may contain either an X or a Y chromosome - The SRY gene on the Y chromosome codes for the
development of testes - X chromosome has genes for many traits NOT
associated with sexual characteristics
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9Sex-linked Inheritance
- A gene located on either sex chromosome is called
a sex-linked gene - In humans, sex-linked usually refers to a gene on
the larger X chromosome - If gene is on Y chromosome
- Sons will inherit from father
- Females dont get Y-linked traits
- Y-linked genes not common
- Example Hairy ears
10X-linked Inheritance
- If gene is on X chromosome
- Can inherit from either parent
- Sons always get X chromosome from mom and Y
chromosome from dad
11X-linked traits
- Color blindness
- Hemophilia
- Duchene muscular dystrophy
- (SCID) Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Syndrome
- AKA Bubble boy disease
12X-linked recessive genes
- Sex-linked genes follow specific patterns of
inheritance - For a recessive sex-linked trait to be expressed
- A female needs two copies of the allele
- A male needs only one copy of the allele
- Sex-linked recessive disorders are much more
common in males than in females
13Females X-linked
- In mammalian females, one of the two X
chromosomes in each cell is randomly inactivated
during embryonic development - The inactive X condenses into a Barr body
- If a female is heterozygous for a particular gene
located on the X chromosome, she will be a mosaic
for that character
14Carriers
- Females can be carriers
- Have one copy of gene, but do not show trait
- Other X has normal dominant gene
- Males cannot be carriers, they either have it or
they do not - Males will give gene to all daughters, none to
sons - If he has the gene all his daughters will be
carriers of trait
15Red-green color blindness
- X-linked disorder
- Cant differentiate these two colors
- Many people who have this are not aware of the
fact - First described in a boy who could not be trained
to harvest only the ripe, red apples from his
fathers orchard. - Instead, he chose green apples as often as he
chose red - What serious consequence could result from this?
16Sex-Linked Traits
1. Normal Color Vision A 29, B 45, C --, D 26
2. Red-Green Color-Blind A 70, B --, C 5, D --
3. Red Color-blind A 70, B --, C 5, D 6
4. Green Color-Blind A 70, B --, C 5, D 2
17Hemophilia
- An X-linked disorder that causes a problem with
blood clotting - If your blood didnt have the ability to clot and
you bruised yourself or scraped your knee, you
would be in danger of bleeding to death - Queen Victoria was a carrier and she passed the
trait on to some of her children
18Hemophilia
- About 1 in every 10,000 males has hemophilia, but
only about 1 in every 1 million females inherits
the same disorder - Why????
- Males only have one X chromosome
- A single recessive allele for hemophilia will
cause the disorder - Females would need two recessive alleles to
inherit hemophilia - Males inherit the allele for hemophilia on the X
chromosome from their carrier or infected mothers
19Hemophilia
20Hemophilia
- Hemophilia can be treated with blood transfusions
and injections of Factor VIII, the blood-clotting
enzyme that is absent in people affected by the
condition - Both treatments are expensive
- New methods of DNA technology are being used to
develop a safer and cheaper source of the
clotting factor
21Sex-linked Questions
- Both the mother and the father of a male
hemophiliac appear normal. From whom did the son
inherit the allele for hemophilia? What are the
genotypes of the mother, the father and the son? - Mother
- Mother XNXn, Father XNY, Son XnY
- A woman is color blind. If she marries a man with
normal vision, what are the chances that her
daughter will be color blind? Will be carriers?
What are her chances that her sons will be color
blind? - 0
- 100
- 100
- Is it possible for two normal parents to have a
color blind daughter? - No - mom would have to be at least carrier dad
have it
22What is on our chromosomes?
- Each chromosome has hundreds or thousands of
genes - Genes located on the same chromosome that tend to
be inherited together are called linked genes - Thomas Morgan found that body color and wing size
of fruit flies are usually inherited together in
specific combinations - He noted that these genes do not assort
independently, and reasoned that they were on the
same chromosome - However, nonparental phenotypes were also
produced - Understanding this result involves exploring
genetic recombination
23Genetic Recombination
- Mendel observed that combinations of traits in
some offspring differ from either parent - Offspring with a phenotype matching one of the
parental phenotypes are called parental types - Offspring with nonparental phenotypes (new
combinations of traits) are called recombinant
types, or recombinants - Morgan discovered that genes can be linked, but
the linkage was incomplete, as evident from
recombinant phenotypes - Morgan proposed that some process must sometimes
break the physical connection between genes on
the same chromosome - Mechanism was the crossing over of homologous
chromosomes
24Genetic map
- Alfred Sturtevant, one of Morgans students,
constructed a genetic map, an ordered list of the
genetic loci along a particular chromosome - Sturtevant predicted that the farther apart two
genes are, the higher the probability that a
crossover will occur between them and therefore
the higher the recombination frequency
25Genetic map
- A linkage map is a genetic map of a chromosome
based on recombination frequencies - Distances between genes can be expressed as map
units one map unit, or centimorgan, represents a
1 recombination frequency (max value 50) - Map units indicate relative distance and order,
not precise locations of genes
26Human Genome Project
- The most ambitious mapping project to date has
been the sequencing of the human genome - Officially begun as the Human Genome Project in
1990, the sequencing was largely completed by
2003 - The project had three stages
- Genetic (or linkage) mapping
- Physical mapping
- DNA sequencing
27Human Genome Project
- A physical map expresses the distance between
genetic markers, usually as the number of base
pairs along the DNA - It is constructed by cutting a DNA molecule into
many short fragments and arranging them in order
by identifying overlaps - Sequencing was then done on the chromosomes
28Gene Manipulation
- DNA sequencing has depended on advances in
technology, starting with making recombinant DNA - In recombinant DNA, nucleotide sequences from two
different sources, often two species, are
combined in vitro into the same DNA molecule - Methods for making recombinant DNA are central to
genetic engineering, the direct manipulation of
genes for practical purposes
29Biotechnology
- DNA technology has revolutionized biotechnology,
the manipulation of organisms or their genetic
components to make useful products - One benefit of DNA technology is identification
of human genes in which mutation plays a role in
genetic diseases - Scientists can diagnose many human genetic
disorders by using molecular biology techniques
to look for the disease-causing mutation - Genetic disorders can also be tested for using
genetic markers that are linked to the
disease-causing allele
30Transgenics
- Advances in DNA technology and genetic research
are important to the development of new drugs to
treat diseases - Transgenic animals are made by introducing genes
from one species into the genome of another
animal - Transgenic animals are pharmaceutical
factories, producers of large amounts of
otherwise rare substances for medical use - Pharm plants are also being developed to make
human proteins for medical use - This is useful for the production of insulin,
human growth hormones, and vaccines
31Gene Therapy
- Gene therapy is the alteration of an afflicted
individuals genes - Gene therapy holds great potential for treating
disorders traceable to a single defective gene - Vectors are used for delivery of genes into
specific types of cells (example bone marrow) - Gene therapy raises ethical questions, such as
whether human germ-line cells should be treated
to correct the defect in future generations
32Causes of Genetic Disorders
- Meiosis usually functions accurately, but
problems may arise at times - Large-scale chromosomal alterations often lead to
spontaneous abortions (miscarriages) or cause a
variety of developmental disorders - In nondisjunction, pairs of homologous
chromosomes do not separate normally during
meiosis - May occur in Meiosis I or II
- One gamete receives two of the same type of
chromosome - Another gamete receives no copy of the chromosome
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34Fertilization after nondisjunction
- Nondisjunction results in gametes with an extra
or missing chromosome - If the other gamete is normal, the zygote will
have 2n 1 (47 in humans) or 2n - 1 (45 in
humans) - Most of the time an extra chromosome prevents
development from occurring - Aneuploidy results from the fertilization of
gametes in which nondisjunction occurred - Offspring with this condition have an abnormal
number of a particular chromosome
35Fertilization after nondisjunction
- Monosomy occurs when the zygote has only one copy
of a particular chromosome (2n -1) - Trisomy occurs when the zygote has three copies
of a particular chromosome (2n1) - Polyploidy is a condition in which an organism
has more than two complete sets of chromosomes - Triploidy (3n) is three sets of chromosomes
- Tetraploidy (4n) is four sets of chromosomes
- Polyploidy is common in plants, but not animals
- Polyploids are more normal in appearance than
aneuploids
36Nondisjunction animation Animation 2
37Human Disorders due to chromosome alterations
- Alterations of chromosome number are associated
with some serious disorders - Some types of aneuploidy appear to upset the
genetic balance less than others, resulting in
individuals surviving to birth and beyond - These surviving individuals have a set of
symptoms, or syndrome, characteristic of the type
of aneuploidy
38Down Syndrome
- Down syndrome is an aneuploid condition that
results from three copies of chromosome 21 - Trisomy 21
- Most common serious birth defect
- 1 in 700 births
- Varying degrees of mental retardation
- Due to Gart gene on 21st chromosome
- 1/2 eggs of female will carry extra 21 and 1/2
will be normal - Risk increases with age of mother
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40Incidence of Down Syndrome
41Klinefelter Syndrome
- Klinefelter syndrome is the result of an extra X
chromosome in a male, producing XXY individuals - Trisomy 23 (XXY)
- 1 in every 2,000 births
- Could be from nondisjunction in either parent
42Turner Syndrome
- Turner syndrome produces XO females, who are
sterile - Monosomy 23 (XO)
- 1 in every 5,000 births
- It is the only known viable monosomy in humans
- Girls with Turner Syndrome do not develop
secondary sex characteristics such as breast
tissue and underarm or pubic hair
43Mutation types
- Alterations of chromosome structure may also lead
to genetic disorders - Breakage of a chromosome can lead to four types
of changes in chromosome structure - Deletion removes a chromosomal segment
- Duplication repeats a chromosomal segment
- Inversion reverses a segment within a chromosome
- Translocation moves a segment from one chromosome
to another
44Mutation types
45Cri du chat
- The syndrome cri du chat (cry of the cat),
results from a specific deletion in chromosome 5 - A child born with this syndrome is mentally
retarded and has a catlike cry - Individuals usually die in infancy or early
childhood
46Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
- Certain cancers, including chronic myelogenous
leukemia (CML), are caused by translocations of
chromosomes - Occurs with the exchange of a large portion of
chromosome 22 with a small fragment from the tip
of chromosome 9 - Shortened, easily recognizable chromosome 22 is
called the Philadelphia chromosome
47Genomic imprinting
- There are two normal exceptions to Mendelian
genetics - One exception involves genes located in the
nucleus, and the other exception involves genes
located outside the nucleus - Genes marked in gametes as coming from mom or dad
- Genes inherited from father expressed differently
than genes inherited from mother - For a small fraction of mammalian traits, the
phenotype depends on which parent passed along
the alleles for those traits - Such variation in phenotype is called genomic
imprinting - Example Insulin-like growth factor in mice
48Organelle genes
- Extranuclear genes (or cytoplasmic genes) are
genes found in organelles in the cytoplasm - Mitochondria, chloroplasts, and other plant
plastids carry small circular DNA molecules - Extranuclear genes are inherited maternally
because the zygotes cytoplasm comes from the egg
49Organelle genes
- The first evidence of extranuclear genes came
from studies on the inheritance of yellow or
white patches on leaves of an otherwise green
plant - Some defects in mitochondrial genes prevent cells
from making enough ATP and result in diseases
that affect the muscular and nervous systems - For example, mitochondrial myopathy and Lebers
hereditary optic neuropathy
50Review Questions
- State the 2 basic ideas behind the chromosomal
theory of inheritance. - Explain Morgans experiment and how it gave
evidence that genes are located on chromosomes. - Explain sex linkage and sex-linked inheritance.
- Name and describe characteristics of 4 genetic
diseases that are known to be X-linked. - Explain the idea of a carrier for an X-linked
genetic disease. - Carry out a monohybrid cross of an X-linked trait
using a Punnett square. - Explain the idea of linked genes.
- Explain the result of genetic recombination.
- Identify the significance of genetic maps and
linkage maps - Describe the Human Genome Project and
differentiate between its 3 main stages. - Discuss the advantages of gene manipulation and
biotechnology. - Describe various uses of transgenic animals.
- Explain the purpose and use of gene therapy.
- Explain how errors in meiosis can cause genetic
syndromes.
51Review Questions
- Define nondisjunction.
- Differentiate between aneuploidy, monosomy,
trisomy, and polyploidy. - Explain the cause, frequency, and problems
associated with the following genetic syndromes
Down syndrome, Klinefelter syndrome, Turner
syndrome. - Describe the effect of mutations on genes.
- Differentiate between deletion, duplication,
inversion, and translocation mutations. - Explain cri du chat syndrome.
- Explain chronic myelogenous leukemia as an
example of a disease-causing mutation. - Explain genomic imprinting and the effects of
extranuclear genes.