1 / 27

Fig. 15-2

Chapter 15: Large-scale chromosomal changes. Fig. 15-2. Aberrant euploidy (usually polyploidy) and aneuploidy. Cell size typically reflects ploidy. 2N and 4N grapes. Fig. 15-4. Fig. 15-12. Types of polyploidy Autopolyploidy : multiple copies of identical

oprah-bass
Download Presentation

Fig. 15-2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 15: Large-scale chromosomal changes Fig. 15-2

  2. Aberrant euploidy (usually polyploidy) and aneuploidy

  3. Cell size typically reflects ploidy 2N and 4N grapes Fig. 15-4 Fig. 15-12

  4. Types of polyploidy Autopolyploidy: multiple copies of identical chromosome sets; usually develop normally; cells are proportionately larger than diploid Alloploidy: multiple copies of non-identical chromosome sets; includes genomes of two different species; usually display “hybrid” characteristics

  5. Autotriploids routinely generate aneuploid gametes (usually sterile) Fig. 15-5

  6. Autotetraploids are readily generated by suppressing mitotic spindle Fig. 15-6

  7. Autotetraploids routinely generate aneuploid gametes (usually sterile) Fig. 15-7

  8. Allopolyploids arise from interspecific hybridization + genome duplication Fig. 15-8

  9. Likely origins of modern hexaploid wheat Fig. 15-10

  10. Aneuploidy: extra or missing chromosomes (less than an entire haploid set) Examples: monosomy: 2n – 1 (one chromosome has no homolog) trisomy: 2n + 1 (three homologs for one chromosome)

  11. Aneuploidy arises from meiotic nondisjunction, forming aneuploid gametes/spores Fig. 15-13

  12. Aneuploids produce aneuploid gametes/spores Fig. 15-15

  13. Viable human aneuploids are mostly limited to the smallest chromosomes and to the sex chromosomes Examples: trisomy-21: Down syndrome XO(no Y): Turner syndrome; primarily female; only viable human monosomic XXY: Klinefelter syndrome; primarily male

  14. Down syndrome: the clinical manifestations of trisomy-21 Fig. 15-17

  15. The frequency of non-disjunction leading to trisomy-21 (and other aneuploidy) is correlated with maternal age Fig. 15-18

  16. Dosage compensation: mechanism for making X-linked gene expression equal in females (with two X chromosomes) and in males (with one X chromosome) In mammals: only one X chromosome is active in each cell In Drosophila: the activity of each X-linked gene copy is reduced in multi-X cells Thus, “gene balance” problems are alleviated in commonly occurring sex chromosome aneuploids

  17. Chromosomal rearrangements • Arise from double-strand DNA breaks • Such artificial ends are very transient and rapidly • join together • Rejoining may restore the chromosome or may result • in any imaginable combination of joined fragments • Recovery of those products follows certain rules: • 1. Each product must have no more nor less than • one centromere • (a mitotic and meiotic “must”) • 2. Viability of the gametes/spore/zygote following • meiosis is subject to gene balance effects • (segmental aneuploids are usually poorly • viable)

  18. Types and origins of chromosomal rearrangements Unbalanced rearrangements Balanced rearrangements Fig. 15-19

  19. Consequences of inversions on neighboring genes Fig. 15-20

  20. Meiotic consequences of inversion heterozygosity Fig. 15-21

  21. Crossingover within inversion • loops result in chromosome • duplications/deletions • Paracentric/Pericentric • Crossover products yield inviable gametes/progeny • non-crossovers predominate • outside markers appear • closer than they really are • crossingover is suppressed Fig. 15-22

  22. Meiosis in translocation heterozygotes can result in duplication/deletion gametes/spores Fig. 15-24

  23. Loops are also seen in synapsed homologs in deletion heterozygotes Deletions behave genetically as multi-gene loss-of-function mutations Fig. 15-28

  24. Deletions are useful in physically mapping small chromosome regions Fig. 15-29

  25. Incidence of chromosome mutations in humans Fig. 15-33

  26. Fig. 15-

  27. Fig. 15-

More Related