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Exceptions to Mendelian Inheritance. Chapter 4. Exceptions to Simple Inheritance. Over 15,000 genetically inherited human traits are identified More that 5,000 are diseases or abnormalities Many do not follow simple rules of dominance. Polygenic Traits.
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Exceptions to Mendelian Inheritance Chapter 4
Exceptions to Simple Inheritance • Over 15,000 genetically inherited human traits are identified • More that 5,000 are diseases or abnormalities • Many do not follow simple rules of dominance
Polygenic Traits • Determined by combined effect of more than one pair of genes. • Sometimes called continuous traits • Examples: • Stature (genes determine size of all body parts) • Human skin, hair and eye color
Incomplete Dominance • Results in intermediate expression • Flower color • 4 o’clock flowers • Red, White, Pink • Pitch of human male voice • Lowest and highest are homozygous, intermediate baritones are heterozygous • Tay-Sachs disease • Heterozygous results in 40-60% enzyme production
Codominance • Two alleles are both expressed • Longhorn Cattle color • Red, White, Roan (red with white spots) • ABO Blood types: • If both A and B are present, type is AB • Neither is recessive
Multiple-Allele Series • More than two choices of alleles are present for a trait • ABO blood type has three alleles • HLA system: genetically inherited system for recognizing and rejecting foreign tissues (transplanted organs) • has the most genes of any other known human multiple-allele series. (at least 30,000,000 possible HLA genotypes) • HLA stands for "human leukocyte antigen"
ABO Blood Types • Mixing blood from two individuals can lead to blood clumping or agglutination • Karl Landsteiner discovered that this was a reaction which occurs when the receiver of a blood transfusion has antibodies against the donor blood cells • he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1930
What is blood made up of? • The red blood cells • contain hemoglobin. • Red blood cells transport O2 and CO2 to and from body tissues. • The white blood cells • fight infection. • The platelets • help the blood to clot • The plasma • Fluid which contains salts and various kinds of proteins.
What determines the different blood groups? • certain protein molecules called antigens and antibodies • Antigens are located on the surface of the red blood cells • Antibodies are in the blood plasma. • Antigens and antibodies clump together (agglutination)
What are the different blood groups? • Blood group A (IA, IA ), (IA, i)have A antigens on the surface of red blood cells and B antibodies in blood plasma. • Blood group B (IB, IB ), (IB, i) have B antigens on the surface of red blood cells and A antibodies in blood plasma.
What are the different blood groups? • Blood group AB (IA, IB )have both A and B antigens on the surface of red blood cells and no A or B antibodies in blood plasma. • Blood group O (i, i) have neither A or B antigens on the surface of red blood cells but have both A and B antibodies in blood plasma.
Blood transfusions – who can receive blood from whom? • The transfusion will work if a person who is going to receive blood has a blood group that doesn't have any antibodies against the donor blood's antigens.
People with blood group 0 are called "universal donors" and people with blood group AB are called "universal receivers."
Rh Factor • Refers to another antigen on red blood cells • Dominant trait is to have the antigen • Rh+ • Recessive trait is not to have it • Rh- • A person with Rh- blood will produce antibodies to Rh+ blood • Can be a problem in pregnancy
Father's Rh factor genes are + + • Mother's are + + • Baby will have one + from the father and one + gene from the mother • Baby will be + + Rh positive.
father's genes are + - • mother's are + - • the baby can be: • + + Rh positive • + - Rh positive • - - Rh negative
father's Rh factor genes are + + • mother's are - - • the baby will have one + from the father and one - gene from the mother • The baby will be + - Rh positive
Mother is given an injection at 28 weeks and after baby is born. • This stops the production of antibodies.
Sex chromosomes are not identical homologs • There is a region in common, so they can synapse during meiosis • Y carries some male-specific genes, but lacks many genes that are on the X
X-Linkage in Humans (Table 4.3) • Color blindness, deutan and protan types • Ichthyosis • Fabry’s disease • G-6-PD deficiency • Hemophilia A & B • Hunter syndrome • Lesch-nyhan syndrome • Muscular dystrophy
Sex-limited Genes • Autosomal genes that are inherited by both male and female BUT • Only expressed in one sex • Examples • Male beard • Milk production in dairy cows • Feathers in domestic fowl
Sex-controlled genes • Expressed in both sexes BUT • Different phenotypes for male and female • Example • Pattern baldness
Genome Imprinting • Also called genetic imprinting • Affects chromosome region, not individual genes • Some of our genes have to come from a particular parent to work normally • Depends on whether chromosome passes through sperm or egg forming tissue
Examples • Inactivation of one X chromosome in females • Prader-Willi syndrome • Functioning gene must come from father • Occurs if part of father’s chromosome 15 is deleted • mental retardation, decreased muscle tone, short stature, emotional fluctuations and an insatiable appetite which can lead to life-threatening obesity
Angelman syndrome • Occurs when part of mother’s chromosome 15 is deleted • Severe developmental delay • Behavioral uniqueness such as frequent laughter or smiling, happy demeanor • Movement/Balance Disorder
Modifying Genes • Genes that have small quantitative effects on the level of expression of another gene • In mice, coat color is controlled by the B gene. • The B allele = black coat color (dominant) • The b allele = a brown coat (recessive)
The intensity of the color, either black or brown is controlled by another gene, the D gene. • dominant D = full color and recessive d = a dilute or faded expression of the color expression at the B gene
B_D_ (black) • B_dd (dilute black) • bbD_ (brown) • bbdd (dilute brown)
Regulator Genes • Initiate or block other genes • Function in growth and development • Also called homeotic genes
Incomplete Penetrance • Effect depends upon certain environmental factors • Nutrition, toxic exposures, other illnesses, actions of other genes • Some individuals do not express the phenotype • E.g. polydactyly • The hand of blues guitar player Hound Dog Taylor exhibiting polydactyly.
Pleiotropy • The ability of a single gene to have multiple phenotypic effects • e.g., sickle cell anemia causes multiple symptoms, only one of which is the actual sickle celled condition
Pleiotropy • Porphyria variegata: dominant metabolic disorder • Affects urinary, digestive, muscular and nervous systems • Seen in King George III of England
Epistasis • A condition in which a gene at one locus can effect the phenotypic expression of a second gene • Causes deviation from the predicted 9:3:3:1 Mendelian ratio (often 9:7)
For example, in mice, fur color controlled by two genes - C (melanin deposition, and B (Black versus brown)
Stuttering Alleles • Found in more than 15 human disorders • Results in “anticipation”: worsening of symptoms with each generation • Repeats of <40 copies occur normally in genes and introns (CAGCAGCAGCAG) • Larger repeats unstable, increasing in number in each generation • May make mRNA too large to get out of nucleus
Environmental Influences • Sometimes difficult to determine whether individual differences in a trait are caused by genes or environment • Type I Diabetes • Runs in families in no particular pattern • Immune system attacks pancreas • Connected to severe pancreatic infection • Inherit a susceptibility, do not develop diabetes unless infection occurs
Heart Health • Genes control: • How well body handles lipids in blood • Blood pressure • Blood clotting • We control: • Diet • Smoking • Cholesterol levels • Amount of exercise • Obesity • stress