Title: Genetic Linkage and Recombination
1Genetic Linkage and Recombination
- Mendel was lucky - the genes he chose all
segregated independently - This is not true of all genes - many genes are
linked - In humans, there are 23 pairs of chromosomes and
about 35000 pairs of genes - each chromosome has
a few hundred to a few thousand genes - Genes close together on the same chromosome are
linked and do not segregate independently
2Terms Definitions
- Genes can have several different forms due to
mutations in the DNA. These forms are called
alleles. Property of having different forms is
called polymorphism - Organism with 2 copies of the same allele of a
gene in diploid cells is homozygous for the gene - Organism with different alleles of a gene in
diploid cells is heterozygous for the gene - Males are hemizygous for genes on X and Y
chromosomes
3Modes of inheritance
- Dominant alleles affect the phenotype when
present in 1 copy (heterozygous), e.g.
Huntingtons disease - Recessive alleles affect the phenotype only when
present in 2 copies (homozygous), e.g. cystic
fibrosis - Can tell whether dominant or recessive by
studying Mode of Inheritance in families
(examples in my first lecture)
4Oogenesis spermatogenesis (animals)
- Oogenesis is the process of egg formation
- Spermatogenesis is the process of sperm formation
- Both go through several stages, with (in mammals)
different timing in males than females - Sperms go through more cell divisions than eggs
do - more chance of mutation
5Fertilisation
- 2 haploid cells (egg, sperm) form 1 diploid cell
(the zygote) which develops into the embryo - Whether sperm contained an X or Y chromosome
determines if embryo is female or male - Embryo contains an assortment of genes from each
original parent - more genetic diversity - Mitochondria (and their DNA) come only from
mother via the egg - maternal inheritance
6Meiosis
- Process of cell division in germ cells, to
produce eggs or sperm (gametes) - 1 diploid cell 2 haploid cells
- Goes through several defined stages
- Chromosomes are passed on as re-arranged copies
due to recombination - creates genetic diversity
7Meiosis and Recombination
Chromosomes pair up
DNA replication Chiasmata form
Recombination
1st cell division
2nd cell division
Gametes
Result meiosis generates new combinations of
alleles
8The overall process
Mum
Egg
Development to adult
Dad
Sperm
Fertilisation
Meiosis Recombination
9How much genetic variation?
- About 35,000 genes in humans
- If each gene has only 2 alleles (probably an
underestimate), then - Number of possible genotypes 335,000
1016,700 - Far more than all the atoms in the Universe!
- Essentially, we are all genetically unique
(except identical twins)
10Recombination
- The closer together 2 genes are on the same
chromosome, the less likely there is to be a
recombination between them - such genes are
linked and do not segregate independently - Genes that are far apart are likely to have a
recombination between them and will segregate
independently - such genes are unlinked - Genes on separate chromosomes are unlinked
11Linkage to an autosomal dominant gene
A and a are alleles of a marker gene
AA
Aa
Yellow shading indicates affected with a genetic
disease (NOT caused by gene A/a)
Aa
aa
Allele a of the marker gene always segregates
with the disease, so the 2 genes must be linked
aa
Aa
aa
Aa
12An application of linkage
- Can do prenatal diagnosis for genetic disease
using a linked gene - Useful when you dont know exactly what gene is
causing the disease
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