Title: Inheritance Patterns and Human Genetics
1Chapter 12
Royal Hemophilia
- Inheritance Patterns and Human Genetics
2How is your sex determined?
- Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945)
- Won the Nobel Prize in 1933 for work with fruit
flies Drosophila their white-eyed mutation. - Found that Drosophila had 4 pairs of chromosomes
with 1 mismatched pair - Males XY
- Females XX.
- True for all mammals and most insects
- Always a 5050 chance of getting a male or female
offspring
3(No Transcript)
4Why work with fruit flies?
- .5mm long
- Fast reproductive cycle
- Embryo develops 1 day after fertilization to
become a larva - Pupa 2 days later
- 4 more days to emerge as an adult
- Fertile with 8 - 12 hours after hatching
- Need only a small area to culture many
- Reproduce many offspring
5Since Y chromosome is so small, could genes be
located on the X chromosome that are not on the Y
chromosomes?
- Sex Linkage
- traits that are determined by whether you are
male or female - Normal fruit flies (wild type) are Red eyed
- Morgan crossed a white eyed male and a red
eyed female fruit fly. - All F1 were wild type fruit flies
- Did an F1 cross.
- ½ the males were white eyed but no females had
the white eyes
6 P XRXR x Xr Y
Xr Y
XR XRXr XRY
 XR XRXr XRY
Xr Y
XRÂ
 XR
Phenotype ratio 100 wild type
7F1 cross XRXr x XRY
XRÂ Â Y
 XR XRXR XRYÂ
Xr XRXr XrYÂ
XRÂ Â Y
 XR
XrÂ
F1 cross XRXr x XRY
Phenotype ratio 75 wild type 25 white eyed
100 of females will be wild type 50 of
males could be white eyed
8What cross would yield a white eyed female?
XRXr x XrY
Xr  Y
 XR XRXr XRYÂ
Xr XrXr XrYÂ
Phenotype 5050 for males and females for white
or wild type eyes
9Human Sex Chromosomes
ltgt
- The X chromosome is much larger than the Y
chromosome. - Genes that are located on the top of the X
chromosome are not on the Y chromosome - Males either have the trait or are normal
- Females can be carriers for the traits.
10Linked Genes
- Genetic linkage is the tendency of alleles found
on a chromosome to be inherited together during
meiosis - Genes nearer to each other are less likely to be
separated onto different chromatids during
crossover, and are genetically linked - The nearer two genes are on a chromosome, the
lower is the chance of a swap occurring between
them, and the more likely they are to be
inherited together.
11Chromosome Mapping
- A genetic map is a map based on the frequencies
of recombination between markers during crossover
- The greater the frequency of recombination
between two genetic markers, the further apart
they are assumed to be - Conversely, the lower the frequency of
recombination between the markers, the smaller
the physical distance between them.
12Sex-linked traits in humans
- Red-Green color blindness recessive. Cant
distinquish between colors - Muscular dystrophy- recessive weakens then
destroys muscle tissue - Hemophilia recessive lacks ability to produce
clotting factor bleeders - Ran rampant through the royal families of Europe
Royal Hemophilia
Queen Victoria
Czar Nicholas II
13Detecting Genetic Diseases
- Amniocentesis
- The Pedigree
14(No Transcript)
15How could you trace a trait throughout a family?
- Pedigree
- shows how a trait is inherited over several
generations
Female Female with the trait
Male Male with the
trait If half colored in, they are a carrier of
the trait
16(No Transcript)
17Sample Pedigrees
18Human Genetic Disorders
- Color blindness
- Hemophilia
- Cystic fibrosis
- Huntingdons disease
- Tay Sachs
- Sickle cell anemia
19Here is a test for you. Look at the figures below
and write down what you see. Do not talk or make
any comments during this test!
.
4.
If you could not see the 29, 45, 56, 6 or 8, you
are color blind!! 12 20 of the population has
this trait.
20If normal color vision, you will see a 5. If
colorblind, you see a 2
Youtube test
21Sex influenced trait
- Males and females express trait differently with
the same phenotype - Male Pattern Baldness recessive speaks for
itself! - On autosomes, not sex linked
- XNXN XNYN - Normal hair
- XNXn XNYn - Normal female, Bald male
- XnXn XnYn - Bald
22How does the inheritance of traits located on the
same chromosome affect how they are inherited?
- Linkage groups
- If genes are located on the same chromosome, they
tend to be inherited together - Morgan - genes for wing length and body color
were on the same chrom (linked) - Crossing over during Prophase I of Meiosis
unlinks linked genes - The closer two genes are on a chromosome, the
less likely they are to cross over. gt
probability of crossing over the further away
they are on a chrom
23(No Transcript)
24Multiple Alleles
- Traits controlled by 3 or more alleles for a
given trait - Blood type IA IB i (A, B, O)
25- Polygenic inheritance
- 2 or more genes determine a single trait. Ends
up blending these genes - Height
- Skin pigmentation
- Eye color
- Hair color
26(No Transcript)
27What can go wrong? AKA Mutations
- Germ cell mutations
- affect gametes
- may be passed on to offspring
- 2. Somatic mutations
- affect body cells
- not inheritable
- Some cancers leukemia
28- Chromosomal mutations
- changes in structure of a chromosome or
addition or loss of an entire chromosome - Deletion/addition portion of chrom is missing
or added - Inversions pieces of chroms flip flop
- Translocations pieces of nonhomologous chroms
are exchanged - A lovely British animation
29(No Transcript)
30- Nondisjunction
- type of Chromosomal mutation
- entire chromosomes are missing or extra
chromosomes - Chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis
- Results in gametes with extra chromosomes or
missing chromosomes
Animation
31 - Trisomy 21
- Down syndrome
- Extra 21 Chromosomes
32- If Sex chromosomes fail to disjoin
- Turners syndrome X0 female
- Klinefelters syndrome XXY male
33 46XX 45X0
47XXY 46XY Descriptions
34Disorder Symptom Pattern of Inheritance Frequency at birth
Huntington's disease Deterioration of brain tissue - middle age Autosomal dominant 1/10,000
Cystic fibrosis Mucus clogs lungs, liver pancreas - doesn't make it to adulthood autosomal recessive 1/2,080 (whites)
Sickle cell anemia Impaired blood circulation - organ damage autosomal recessive? 1/500 (African decent)
Tay-Sachs disease Deterioration of central nervous system - childhood death autosomal recessive 1/1,600 (European Jewish decent)
Phenylketonuria Brain failure - doesn't have enzyme for phenylalanine digestion autosomal recessive 1/18,000
Hemophilia Failure to clot blood X-linked recessive 1/7,000
Muscular dystrophy wasting away of muscles X-linked recessive 1/10,000
Genetic Disorders
35What to do to help?
GENE THERAPY
36Other neat stuff
X chromosome inactivation and Barr bodies