Title: Photosynthesis
1(No Transcript)
2Outline
- X-Linked Alleles
- Human X-Linked Disorders
- Gene Linkage
- Crossing-Over
- Chromosome Map
- Changes in Chromosome Number
- Changes in Chromosome Structure
- Human Syndromes
3Sex Determination in Humans
- Sex is determined in humans by allocation of
chromosomes at fertilization - Both sperm and egg carry one of each of the 22
autosomes - The egg always carries the X chromosome as number
23 - The sperm may carry either and X or Y
- If the sperm donates an X in fertilization, the
zygote will be female - If the sperm donates a Y in fertilization, the
zygote will be male - Therefore, the sex of all humans is determined by
the sperm donated by their father
4X-Linked Alleles
- Genes carried on autosomes are said to be
autosomally linked - Genes carried on the female sex chromosome (X)
are said to be X-linked (or sex-linked) - X-linked genes have a different pattern of
inheritance than autosomal genes have - The Y chromosome is blank for these genes
- Recessive alleles on X chromosome
- Follow familiar dominant/recessive rules in
females (XX) - Are always expressed in males (XY), whether
dominant or recessive - Males said to be monozygous for X-linked genes
5Eye Color in Fruit Flies
- Fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) are common
subjects for genetics research - They normally (wild-type) have red eyes
- A mutant recessive allele of a gene on the X
chromosome can cause white eyes - Possible combinations of genotype and phenotype
Genotype Genotype Phenotype Phenotype
XRXR Homozygous Dominant Female Red-eyed
XRXr Heterozygous Female Red-eyed
XrXr Homozygous Recessive Female White-eyed
XRY Monozygous Dominant Male Red-eyed
XrY Monozygous Recessive Male White-eyed
6X-Linked Inheritance
7Human X-Linked DisordersRed-Green Color
Blindness
- Color vision In humans
- Depends three different classes of cone cells in
the retina - Only one type of pigment is present in each class
of cone cell - The gene for blue-sensitive is autosomal
- The red-sensitive and green-sensitive genes are
on the X chromosome - Mutations in X-linked genes cause RG color
blindness - All males with mutation (XbY) are colorblind
- Only homozygous mutant females (XbXb) are
colorblind - Heterozygous females (XBXb) are asymptomatic
carriers
8Red-Green Colorblindness Chart
9X-Linked Recessive Pedigree
10Human X-Linked DisordersMuscular Dystrophy
- Muscle cells operate by release and rapid
sequestering of calcium - Protein dystrophin required to keep calcium
sequestered - Dystrophin production depends on X-linked gene
- A defective allele (when unopposed) causes
absence of dystrophin - Allows calcium to leak into muscle cells
- Causes muscular dystrophy
- All sufferers male
- Defective gene always unopposed in males
- Males die before fathering potentially homozygous
recessive daughters
11Human X-Linked DisordersHemophilia
- Bleeders Disease
- Blood of affected person either refuses to clot
or clots too slowly - Hemophilia A due to lack of clotting factor IX
- Hemophilia B due to lack of clotting factor
VIII - Most victims male, receiving the defective allele
from carrier mother - Bleed to death from simple bruises, etc.
- Factor VIII now available via biotechnology
12Hemophilia Pedigree
13Human X-Linked DisordersFragile X Syndrome
- Due to base-triplet repeats in a gene on the X
chromosome - CGG repeated many times
- 6-50 repeats asymptomatic
- 230-2,000 repeats growth distortions and mental
retardation - Inheritance pattern is complex and unpredictable
14Gene Linkage
- When several genes of interest exist on the same
chromosome - Such genes form a linkage group
- Tend to be inherited as a block
- If all genes on same chromosome
- Gametes of parent likely to have exact allele
combination as gamete of either grandparent - Independent assortment does not apply
- If all genes on separate chromosomes
- Allele combinations of grandparent gametes will
be shuffled in parental gametes - Independent assortment working
15Chromosome NumberPolyploidy
- Polyploidy
- Occurs when eukaryotes have more than 2n
chromosomes - Named according to number of complete sets of
chromosomes - Major method of speciation in plants
- Diploid egg of one species joins with diploid
pollen of another species - Result is new tetraploid species that is
self-fertile but isolated from both parent
species - Some estimate 47 of flowering plants are
polyploids - Often lethal in higher animals
16Chromosome NumberAneuploidy
- Monosomy (2n - 1)
- Diploid individual has only one of a particular
chromosome - Caused by failure of synapsed chromosomes to
separate at Anaphase I (nondisjunction) - Trisomy (2n 1) occurs when an individual has
three of a particular type of chromosome - Diploid individual has three of a particular
chromosome - Also caused by nondisjunction
- This usually produces one monosomic daughter cell
and one trisomic daughter cell in meiosis I - Down syndrome is trisomy 21
17Nondisjunction
18Chromosome NumberAbnormal Sex Chromosome Number
- Result of inheriting too many or too few X or Y
chromosomes - Caused by nondisjunction during oogenesis or
spermatogenesis - Turner Syndrome (XO)
- Female with single X chromosome
- Klinefelter Syndrome (XXY)
- No matter how many X chromosomes, presence of Y
renders individual male
19Chromosome NumberAbnormal Sex Chromosome Number
- Ploy-X females
- XXX simply taller thinner than usual
- Some learning difficulties
- Many menstruate regularly and are fertile
- More than 3 Xs renders severe mental retardation
- Jacobs syndrome (XYY)
- Tall, persistent acne, speech reading problems
20Abnormal Chromosome Structure
- Deletion
- Missing segment of chromosome
- Lost during breakage
- Translocation
- A segment from one chromosome moves to a
non-homologous chromosome - Follows breakage of two nonhomologous chromosomes
and improper re-assembly
21Deletion, Translocation,Duplication, and
Inversion
22Abnormal Chromosome Structure
- Duplication
- A segment of a chromosome is repeated in the same
chromosome - Inversion
- Occurs as a result of two breaks in a chromosome
- The internal segment is reversed before
re-insertion - Genes occur in reverse order in inverted segment
23Abnormal Chromosome Structure
- Deletion Syndromes
- Williams syndrome - Loss of segment of chromosome
7 - Cri du chat syndrome (cats cry) - Loss of
segment of chromosome 5 - Translocations
- Alagille syndrome
- Some cancers