1 / 27

Chapter 12

Chapter 12. Patterns of Heredity and Human Genetics. Making a Pedigree. Pedigree: A graphic representation of genetic inheritance It looks very similar to a family tree Circle= Female Square= Male Carrier: Half-shaded circle or square , a heterozygous individual. Analyzing A Pedigree.

shilah
Download Presentation

Chapter 12

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 12 Patterns of Heredity and Human Genetics

  2. Making a Pedigree • Pedigree: A graphic representation of genetic inheritance • It looks very similar to a family tree • Circle= Female • Square= Male • Carrier: Half-shaded circle or square , a heterozygous individual

  3. Analyzing A Pedigree • Read ‘Analyzing a Pedigree’ pg. 310-311 • Disorders are often passed down from generation to generation • Disorders often become scarcer and scarcer with each generation.

  4. Review • Review allele ,phenotype, and genotype • At end of 12.1 make a pedigree of family eye color

  5. Simple Recessive Heredity • Many disorders are caused by recessive alleles • This includes eye color, hair color, skin tone, and even height.

  6. Cystic Fibrosis • A fairly common genetic disorder among white Americans. • Every 1 in 28 white American carries this allele • This is due to a to a defective protein in the plasma membrane and leads to thick mucus in the lungs and digestive track

  7. Tay-Sachs Disease • A recessive disorder of the central nervous system • This is common amongst Ashkenazi Jews

  8. Phenylkentonuria • This is also called PKU • It results in the absence of enzymes that converts one amino acid to another

  9. Simple Dominant Traits • A cleft chin is an example of a simple dominant trait. • You can inherit simple dominant trait from at least one parent.

  10. Huntington’s Disease • This is a lethal disorder caused by a rare dominant allele • Huntington’s Disease often results in death

  11. 12.2 – When Heredity FollowsDifferent Rules • Complex Patterns of Inheritance – • Simple Mendelian inheritance – controlled by dominant and recessive • Incomplete dominance – third phenotype • Intermediate or incomplete dominance • Ex) Red snapdragon mixed with a white snapdragon = a pink snapdragon

  12. Incomplete dominance • Third phenotype • Intermediate or incomplete dominance • Ex) Red snapdragon mixed with a white snapdragon = a pink snapdragon

  13. Codominance • Both alleles are expressed • Example in book – Black Chicken with White chicken = a checkered type chicken color.

  14. Multiple phenotypes multiple alleles • Pigeons are an example • 3 different alleles of one gene affect feather color • Book pg 317

  15. Sex determination • 23 rd pairs of chromosomes differs in males and females. The X and Y • Sex-linked inheritance – traits located on the sex genes. • Boy’s have no “Y” to use as a balance

  16. Hemophilia

  17. Polygenic inheritance • Skin color and height are this • Each allele is represented by an uppercase letter • Each contributes a small but equal portio of the trait being expressed. • The phenotype is a range.

More Related