1 / 33

Effects of Smoking During Pregnancy on Fetal Development and Adult Manifestations

This article explores the indirect and direct effects of smoking during pregnancy on fetal development, and how these effects may manifest themselves in adults. It also discusses the correlation of weight, biological siblings, identical twins, fraternal twins, adopted children, and unrelated children in relation to weight and relatedness.

mullinsp
Download Presentation

Effects of Smoking During Pregnancy on Fetal Development and Adult Manifestations

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. Development • Homework #2 is due 10/17 • Bonus #1 is due 10/24

  2. So, Smoking during pregnancy may have indirect and/or direct affects on fetal development, and these affects may manifest themselves in adults.

  3. Correlation of weight (BMI) % Biological siblings 34 Parents and children living together 26 Identical twins reared together 80 Identical twins reared apart 72 Fraternal twins reared together 43 Adopted children and parents 4 Unrelated children living together 1 Correlation of weight and relatedness

  4. Nature and Nurture: Are traits coded for by genes fixed while traits coded for by the environment are under our control?

  5. Developmental mutants of Drosophila melanogaster Fig 12.1

  6. Vertebrate Development: from zygote to adult

  7. Besides adding cells, development can involve cell death.

  8. Development of a mouse paw: yellow areas show dying cells CB 21.19

  9. Early embryo development

  10. Totipotent: ability to differentiate into any cell-type

  11. Totipotency is limited to early stages of animal development

  12. Mature, differentiated plant cells are totipotent

  13. Why do cells lose totipotency?

  14. Why do cells lose totipotency?

  15. Gene expression can be controlled at many points between DNA and making the final proteins. • Changes in the various steps of gene expression control when and how much of a product are produced.

  16. Why change gene expression? • Different cells need different components • Responding to the environment • Replacement of damaged/worn-out parts

  17. DNA packaging fluctuates…genes being expressed are unpackaged, genes not needed are tightly packaged.

  18. Normally DNA is loosely packaged During mitosis DNA is tightly packaged as chromosomes and individually visible box 2.1

  19. DNA packaging fluctuates…Some of the tight packaging of DNA is irreversible.

  20. Irreversible packaging of DNA partially explains the loss of totipotency.

  21. Stem cells still have totipotency

  22. Embryonic Stem Cells are totipotent Adult Stem Cells are pluripotent (only form some cell types)

  23. Developmental information can be encoded by both genetic and non-genetic information. Fig 12.2

  24. What genetic mechanisms regulate/allow development?

  25. All humans are female for the first nine weeks of development

  26. All humans are female for the first nine weeks of development

  27. Down’s Syndrome is caused by an extra chromosome 21.

  28. Down’s Syndrome is caused by an extra chromosome 21. Too much information disrupts normal development.

  29. 4 whorls of a flower Flower parts: Complexity from a few simple genes

  30. Each whorl expresses a specific combination of three genes CB 21.20

  31. Changing expression of A, B, or C genes changes organ identity CB 21.20

  32. Development • Homework #2 is due 10/17 • Bonus #1 is due 10/24

More Related