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Pedigree Chart Symbols. Male Female Person with trait. Sample Pedigree. Recessive Trait. Dominant Trait. Chapter 15 The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance. First Experimental Evidence to connect Mendelism to the chromosome. Thomas Morgan (1910) Used fruit flies as model organism
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Pedigree Chart Symbols Male Female Person with trait
Recessive Trait Dominant Trait
First Experimental Evidence to connect Mendelism to the chromosome • Thomas Morgan (1910) • Used fruit flies as model organism • Allowed the first tracing of traits to specific chromosomes.
Fruit Fly • Drosophila melanogaster • 3 pairs of Autosomes • 1 pair of sex chromosomes
Morgan Observed: • A male fly with a mutation for white eyes.
Morgan crossed • The white eye male with a wild type (red eyed) female. • Wild type is most common – NOT always DOMINANT • Male ww x Female w+w+
The F1 offspring: • All had red eyes. • This suggests that white eyes is a _________? • Recessive. • F1= w+w • What is the predicted phenotypic ratio for the F2 generation?
F1 X F1 = F2 • Expected F2 ratio - 3:1 of red:white • He got this ratio, however, all of the white eyed flies were MALE. • Therefore, the eye color trait appeared to be linked to sex.
Morgan discovered: • Sex linked traits. • Genetic traits whose gene are located on a sex chromosome
Fruit Fly Chromosomes • Female Male • XX XY • Presence of Y chromosome determines the sex • Just like in humans!
Morgan Discovered • There are many genes, but only a few chromosomes. • Therefore, each chromosome must carry a number of genes together as a “package”.
Sex-Linked Problem • A man with hemophilia (a recessive, sex-linked, x-chromosome condition) has a daughter of normal phenotype. She marries a man who is normal for the trait. • A. What is the probability that a daughter of this mating will be a hemophiliac? • B. That a son will be a hemophiliac? • C. If the couple has four sons, what is the probability that all four will be born with hemophilia?
Original Man - XhY • Daughter - must get the dad’s X chromosome XHXh (normal phenotype, so she’s a carrier) • Daughter’s husband XHY (normal phenotype) • A. daughter must get XH from the dad. 0% (50% carrier, 50% homo dom.) • B. son must get Y from dad. 50% chance to be hemophiliac • C. ½ x ½ x ½ x ½ = 1/16
Multiple Genes • Parents are two true-breeding pea plants • Parent 1 Yellow, round Seeds (YYRR) • Parent 2 Green, wrinkled seeds (yyrr) These 2 genes are on different chromosomes(all problems so far have assumed this)
F1: YyRr x YyRr • What are the predicted phenotypic ratios of the offspring? • ¾ yellow ¾ round • ¼ green ¼ wrinkled ¼ (green) x ¼ (wrinkled) = 1/16 green, wrinkled 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio
Linked Genes • Traits that are located on the same chromosome. • Result: • Failure of Mendel's Law of Independent Assortment. • Ratios are different from the expected
Example: • Body Color - gray dominant/wild • b+ - Gray • b - black • Wing Type - normal dominant/wild • vg+ - normal • vg – vestigial (short)
Example b+bvg+vg X bb vgvg Predict the phenotypic ratio of the offspring
Show at board b+b x bb vg+vg x vgvg ½ gray ½ black ½ normal ½ vestigial -----------------------------------------------------¼ gray normal, ¼ gray vestigial, ¼ black normal, ¼ black vestigial 1:1:1:1 phenotypic ratio
Conclusion • Most offspring had the parental phenotype. Both genes are on the same chromosome. • bbvgvg parent can only pass on b vg • b+bvg+vg can pass on b+ vg+ or b vg
Crossing-Over • Breaks up linkages and creates new ones. • Recombinant offspring formed that doesn't match the parental types. • Higher recombinant frequency (non-parental types) = genes further apart on chromosome
If Genes are Linked: • Independent Assortment of traits fails. • Linkage may be “strong” or “weak”. • Strong Linkage means that 2 alleles are often inherited together.
Degree of strength related to how close the traits are on the chromosome.
Genetic Maps • Constructed from crossing-over frequencies. • 1 map unit = 1% recombination frequency. • Can use recombination rates to ‘map’ chromosomes.
Comment - only good for genes that are within 50 map units of each other. Why? • Over 50% gives the same phenotypic ratios as genes on separate chromosomes
Genetic Maps • Have been constructed for many traits in fruit flies, humans and other organisms.
Barr Body • Inactive X chromosome observed in the nucleus. • Way of determining genetic sex without doing a karyotype.
Lyon Hypothesis • Which X inactivated is random. • Inactivation happens early in embryo development by adding CH3 groups to the DNA. • Result - body cells are a mosaic of X types.
Examples • Calico Cats. • Human examples are known such as a sweat gland disorder.
Calico Cats • XB = black fur • XO = orange fur • Calico is heterozygous, XB XO.
Chromosomal Alterations • Changes in number. • Changes in structure.
Number Alterations • Aneuploidy - too many or too few chromosomes, but not a whole “set” change. • Polyploidy - changes in whole “sets” of chromosomes.
Nondisjunction • When chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis • Result – cells have too many or too few chromosomes which is known as aneuploidy
Meiosis I vs Meiosis II • Meiosis I – all 4 cells are abnormal • Meiosis II – only 2 cells are abnormal
Aneuploidy • Caused by nondisjunction, the failure of a pair of chromosomes to separate during meiosis.
Types • Monosomy: 2N - 1 • Trisomy: 2N + 1
Question? • Why is trisomy more common than monosomy? • Fetus can survive an extra copy of a chromosome, but being hemizygous is usually fatal.
Structure Alterations • Deletions • Duplications • Inversions • Translocations