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Development and Inheritance. Muse W12 2440 lecture # 13 4/18/12. Gestation. First Trimester Period of embryological and early fetal development Rudiments of all major organ systems appear Second Trimester Development of organs and organ systems Body shape and proportions change
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Development and Inheritance Muse W12 2440 lecture # 13 4/18/12
Gestation • First Trimester • Period of embryological and early fetal development • Rudiments of all major organ systems appear • Second Trimester • Development of organs and organ systems • Body shape and proportions change • By end, fetus looks distinctively human • Third Trimester • Rapid fetal growth and deposition of adipose tissue • Most major organ systems are fully functional
The First Trimester Figure 29–7a The First Trimester.
The First Trimester Figure 29–7b The First Trimester.
The First Trimester Figure 29–7c The First Trimester.
The First Trimester Figure 29–7d The First Trimester.
The Second and Third Trimesters • Second Trimester • Fetus grows faster than surrounding placenta • Third Trimester • Most of the organ systems become ready • Growth rate starts to slow • Largest weight gain • Fetus and enlarged uterus displace many of mother’s abdominal organs
The Second and Third Trimesters Figure 29–8a The Second and Third Trimesters: A Four-Month-Old Fetus As Seen through a Fiber-Optic Endoscope.
The Second and Third Trimesters Figure 29–8b The Second and Third Trimesters: Head of a Six-Month-Old Fetus As Seen through Ultrasound.
The Second and Third Trimesters Figure 29–9c, d Growth of the Uterus and Fetus.
Inheritance • Nucleated Somatic Cells • Carry copies of original 46 chromosomes present in zygote • Genotype • Chromosomes and their component genes • Contain unique instructions that determine anatomical and physiological characteristics • Derived from genotypes of parents • Phenotype • Physical expression of genotype • Anatomical and physiological characteristics
Inheritance • Homologous Chromosomes • Members of each pair of chromosomes • 23 pairs carried in every somatic cell • At amphimixis, one member of each pair is contributed by spermatozoon, other by ovum
Inheritance • Autosomal Chromosomes • 22 pairs of homologous chromosomes • Most affect somatic characteristics • Each chromosome in pair has same structure and carries genes that affect same traits
Inheritance • Sex Chromosomes • Last pair of chromosomes • Determine whether individual is genetically male or female • Karyotype • Entire set of chromosomes • Locus • Gene’s position on chromosome
Inheritance Figure 29–14 A Human Karyotype.
Inheritance • Alleles are various forms of given gene • Alternate forms determine precise effect of gene on phenotype • Homozygous • Both homologous chromosomes carry same allele of particular gene • Simple Inheritance • Phenotype determined by interactions between single pair of alleles
Inheritance • Heterozygous • Homologous chromosomes carry different allele of particular gene • Resulting phenotype depends on nature of interaction between alleles • Strict Dominance • Dominant allele expressed in phenotype, regardless of conflicting instructions carried by other allele
Inheritance • Recessive Allele • Expressed in phenotype only if same allele is present on both chromosomes of homologous pair • Incomplete Dominance • Heterozygous alleles produce unique phenotype • Codominance • Exhibits both dominant and recessive phenotypes for traits
Inheritance • Penetrance • Percentage of individuals with particular genotype that show “expected” phenotype • Expressivity • Extent to which particular allele is expressed • Teratogens • Factors that result in abnormal development • Punnett Square • Simple box diagram used to predict characteristics of offspring Mutation - change in normal form of gene
Inheritance Figure 29–15 Predicting Phenotypic Characters by Using Punnett Squares.
Inheritance • Polygenic Inheritance • Involves interactions among alleles on several genes • Cannot predict phenotypic characteristics using Punnett square • Linked to risks of developing several important adult disorders • Suppression • One gene suppresses other • Second gene has no effect on phenotype
Inheritance • Complementary Gene Action • Dominant alleles on two genes interact to produce phenotype different from that seen when one gene contains recessive alleles • Sources of Individual Variation • During meiosis, maternal and paternal chromosomes are randomly distributed • Each gamete has unique combination of maternal and paternal chromosomes
Inheritance • Genetic Recombination • During meiosis, various changes can occur in chromosome structure, producing gametes with chromosomes that differ from those of each parent • Greatly increases range of possible variation among gametes • Can complicate tracing of inheritance of genetic disorders
Inheritance • Crossing Over • Parts of chromosomes become rearranged during synapsis • When tetrads form, adjacent chromatids may overlap • Translocation • Reshuffling process • Chromatids may break, overlapping segments trade places
Inheritance Figure 29–17 Crossing Over and Translocation.
Inheritance • Genomic Imprinting • During recombination, portions of chromosomes may break away and be deleted • Effects depend on whether abnormal gamete is produced through oogenesis or spermatogenesis
Inheritance • Chromosomal Abnormalities • Damaged, broken, missing, or extra copies of chromosomes • Few survive to full term • Produce variety of serious clinical conditions • Humans are poorly tolerant of changes in gene copy number (to few or too many = lethal or bad news) • Mutation • Changes in nucleotide sequence of allele
Inheritance • Spontaneous Mutations • Result of random errors in DNA replication • Errors relatively common, but in most cases error is detected and repaired by enzymes in nucleus • Errors that go undetected and unrepaired have potential to change phenotype • Can produce gametes that contain abnormal alleles
Inheritance • Carriers • Individuals who are heterozygous for abnormal allele but do not show effects of mutation
Inheritance • Sex Chromosomes • X Chromosome • Considerably larger • Have more genes than do Y chromosomes • Carried by all oocytes • Y Chromosome • Includes dominant alleles specifying that the individual will be male • Not present in females
Autosomes, sex chromosomes and sex determination Karyotype shows 46 chromosomes arranged in pairs by size and centromere position 22 pairs are autosomes – same appearance in males and females 23rd pair are sex chromosomes XX = female XY = male
Inheritance • Sperm • Carry either X or Y chromosome • Because males have one of each, can pass along either 50% chance of each
Inheritance • X-Linked • Genes that affect somatic structures • Carried by X chromosome • Inheritance does not follow pattern of alleles on autosomal chromosomes
Sex determination Males produce sperm carrying an X or Y Females only produce eggs carrying an X Individual’s sex determined by father’s sperm carrying X or Y Male and female embryos develop identically until about 7 weeks Y initiates male pattern of development SRY on Y chromosome Absence of Y determines female pattern of development
Inheritance Figure 29–18 Inheritance of an X-Linked Trait
Sex-linked inheritance Genotype Phenotype XCXC Normal female XCXc Normal female (carrier) XcXc Color blind female XCY Normal male XcY Color blind male • Genes for these traits on the X but not the Y • Red-green colorblindness • Most common type of color blindness • Red and green are seen as same color • Males have only one X • They express whatever they inherit from their mother
Inheritance • Human Genome Project • Goal was to transcribe entire human genome • Has mapped thousands of human genes • Genome • Full complement of genetic material
Inheritance Figure 29–19 A Map of Human Chromosomes.
Inheritance • Passage of hereditary traits from one generation to the next • Genotype and phenotype • Nuclei of all human cells except gametes contain 23 pairs of chromosomes – diploid or 2n • One chromosome from each pair came from father, other member from mother • Each chromosome contains homologous genes for same traits • Allele – alternative forms of a gene that code for the same trait • Mutation – permanent heritable change in allele that produces a different variant
Phenylketonuria or PKU example • Unable to manufacture enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase • Allele for function enzyme = P • Allele that fails to produce functional enzyme = p • Punnet square show possible combinations of alleles between 2 parents • Genotype – different combinations of genes • Phenotype – expression of genetic makeup • PP – homozygous dominant – normal phenotype • Pp – heterozygous – normal phenotype • 1 dominant allele codes for enough enzyme • Can pass recessive allele on to offspring – carrier • pp - homozygous recessive – PKU • 2 recessive alleles make no functional enzyme
Inheritance • Alleles that code for normal traits are not always dominant • Huntington disease caused by dominant allele • Both homozygous dominant and heterozygous individuals get HD • Nondisjunction • Error in cell division resulting in abnormal number of chromosomes • Aneuploid – chromosomes added or missing • Monosomic cell missing 1 chromosome (2n-1) • Trisomic cell has additional chromosome (2n +1) • Down Syndrome – trisomy 21 – 3 21st chromosomes
Variations of Dominant-recessive inheritance • Simple dominance-recessive • Just described where dominant allele covers effect of recessive allele • Incomplete dominance • Neither allele dominant over other • Heterozygote has intermediate phenotype • Sickle-cell disease
Sickle-cell disease Sickle-cell disease HbAHbA – normal hemoglobin HbSHbS – sickle-cell disease HbAHbS – ½ normal and ½ abnormal hemoglobin Minor problems, are carriers for disease
Incomplete Dominance • Heterozygous individuals have an intermediate phenotype • Example: Sickling gene • SS = normal Hb is made • Ss = sickle-cell trait (both aberrant and normal Hb are made); can suffer a sickle-cell crisis under prolonged reduction in blood O2) • ss = sickle-cell anemia (only aberrant Hb is made; more susceptible to sickle-cell crisis)