630 likes | 633 Views
This lecture presentation explores the principles of inheritance, breaks in chromosomes, and detecting genetic disorders. Topics covered include genetic information, homologous chromosomes, alleles, dominant and recessive traits, genotype and phenotype, Mendelian crosses, pedigree analysis, and various modes of inheritance.
E N D
Chapter 20 Genetics and Human Inheritance Lecture Presentation Betty McGuireCornell University
Genetics and Human Inheritance • Principles of inheritance • Breaks in chromosomes • Detecting genetic disorders
Principles of Inheritance • Genetic information • Carried on chromosomes that are carried in the egg and sperm in equal numbers
Principles of Inheritance • Homologous pairs of chromosomes • 23 chromosomes received from one parent pair with 23 chromosomes from the other parent • Each member of a homologous pair carries genes for the same traits
Principles of Inheritance • Genes • Segments of DNA • Code for a specific protein that will play a structural or functional role in the cell
Principles of Inheritance • Trait • Characteristic • Produced by the actions of one or more gene-directed proteins
Principles of Inheritance • Alleles • Different forms of a gene • Produce different versions of the trait they determine • Example: gene for freckles • One allele causes freckles to form • Other allele does not
Principles of Inheritance • Homozygous • Individuals with two copies of the same allele • Heterozygous • Individuals with different alleles of a given gene
Principles of Inheritance • Dominant • When the effects of an allele can be detected regardless of the alternative allele • Recessive • When the effects of an allele are masked in the heterozygous condition
Principles of Inheritance • Genotype • Alleles that are present • Genetic composition of an individual • Phenotype • Observable physical traits of an individual
Principles of Inheritance • Law of Segregation • During gamete formation, the two alleles for each gene separate as the homologous chromosomes move toward opposite ends of the cell during meiosis • Each chromosome is inherited independent of the other chromosomes, following the Law of Independent Assortment
Principles of Inheritance • Gregor Mendel • Studied how single genes are inherited from parent to offspring • First used one-trait crosses • Then used two-trait (dihybrid) crosses
Principles of Inheritance • Punnett square • Matrix used to predict genetic makeup of offspring of individuals of particular genotypes • Rows represent possible gametes of one parent • Columns represent possible gametes of the other parent • Boxes represent possible combinations of gametes
Principles of Inheritance • Monohybrid cross • Cross in which both parents are heterozygous for one trait of interest • Genotypic ratio of offspring • 1 FF : 2 Ff : 1 ff • Phenotypic ratio of offspring • 3 with freckles (FF and Ff) : 1 without (ff)
Principles of Inheritance • Dihybrid cross • Cross in which both parents are heterozygous for two traits of interest • Phenotypic ratio of offspring • 9 : 3 : 3 : 1
Principles of Inheritance Web Activity: One- and Two-Trait Crosses
Principles of Inheritance • Pedigree • Chart showing the genetic connections among individuals in a family • Especially useful in following recessive alleles that are not visible in the heterozygote
Principles of Inheritance • Genetic disorders • Often caused by recessive alleles • Carrier • Someone who displays the dominant phenotype but is heterozygous for a trait • Carries the recessive allele and can pass it to descendants
Principles of Inheritance • Dominant allele • Often produces a functional protein that the recessive allele does not
Principles of Inheritance • Example: albinism • Ability to produce brown pigment melanin is lacking • Ability to produce melanin depends on the enzyme tyrosinase • Dominant allele that results in pigmentation produces functional tyrosinase • Recessive allele that results in albinism produces nonfunctional tyrosinase
Principles of Inheritance • Complete dominance • Heterozygote exhibits the trait associated with the dominant allele but not that of the recessive allele
Principles of Inheritance • Codominance • Effects of both alleles are apparent in a heterozygote • Example: blood type AB • The protein products of both the A and B alleles are expressed on the surface of the red blood cell
Principles of Inheritance • Incomplete dominance • Expression of the trait in a heterozygous individual is in between the way the trait is expressed in a homozygous dominant or homozygous recessive person • Example: sickle-cell allele • Heterozygote has sickle-cell trait (HbAHbS)
Principles of Inheritance Web Activity: Codominance and Incomplete Dominance
Principles of Inheritance • Pleiotropy • One gene having many effects • Sickling of red blood cells caused by abnormal hemoglobin affects many areas of the body
Principles of Inheritance • Multiple alleles • When three or more forms of a given gene exist across many people in the population • Example: ABO blood types • Gene has three alleles: IA, IB,i
Principles of Inheritance • Polygenic inheritance • Variation in a trait, such as height, independent of environmental influences • Involves two or more genes, often on different chromosomes
Principles of Inheritance • Genes on the same chromosome • Usually inherited together • Described as being linked
Principles of Inheritance • Sex-linked genes • Y chromosome is much smaller than X chromosome • Y carries fewer genes • Most genes on the X chromosome have no corresponding alleles on the Y chromosome • Known as X-linked genes • Different pattern of inheritance • Recessive phenotype of X-linked genes more common in males • Son can inherit X-linked recessive only from mother
Principles of Inheritance • Examples of disorders caused by X-linked recessive alleles • Red-green color blindness • Two forms of hemophilia • Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Principles of Inheritance Web Activity: Sex-Linked Traits
Principles of Inheritance • Sex-influenced genes • Autosomal genes whose expression is influenced by sex hormones • Example: male pattern baldness • More common in men than in women because its expression depends on both the presence of the allele for baldness and the presence of testosterone