1 / 30

Inheritance Patterns for Linked Genes

Inheritance Patterns for Linked Genes. Section Summary. Genes are located at specific chromosome locations called loci (singular, locus). Genes located in close proximity to each other on a chromosome tend to be genetically linked. (the genes are inherited together)

joel-garner
Download Presentation

Inheritance Patterns for Linked Genes

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. Inheritance Patterns for LinkedGenes

  2. Section Summary • Genes are located at specific chromosome locations called loci (singular, locus). • Genes located in close proximity to each other on a chromosome tend to be genetically linked. (the genes are inherited together) • Traits linked to a particular sex chromosome exhibit unique inheritance patterns.

  3. Gene Loci • The alleles of a gene reside at the same location, or locus, on homologous chromosomes.

  4. Gene Loci • Homologous chromosomes may bear either the same alleles or different ones at a particular locus, making an organism either homozygous or heterozygous for each gene.

  5. Independent Assortment

  6. Genetic Linkage • If genes are located on separate chromosomes, they assort independently of each other during meiosis.

  7. Genetic Linkage • The alleles for genes located on the same chromosomeare less likely to assort independently, and instead stay together during meiosis. • The only way such alleles can assort independently is if crossing over during meiosis separates them.

  8. Genetic Linkage • The tendency for alleles for different genes on the same chromosome to be inherited together is called genetic linkage. • Genes with loci that are close together are known as linked genes.

  9. Genetic Linkage • The closer two genes are on a chromosome, the greater the degree of genetic linkage • The farther apart the genes are, the more likely it is that crossing over will separate them.

  10. Gene Maps • Recombination frequency,(the frequency with which certain genes turn up together) can be used to map the distance between gene loci on a chromosome. • These values allow geneticists to create a gene map, a diagram that shows the relative locations and distances of genes on a chromosome.

  11. Gene Maps • This is a gene map of one of a rat’s chromosomes

  12. Inheritance Patterns of Sex-Linked Traits • Any gene that is located on a sex chromosome is called a sex-linked gene. Scanning electron micrograph of an X and Y chromosome Image courtesy of Indigo Instruments, Canada

  13. Inheritance Patterns of Sex-Linked Traits • In humans, most sex-linked genes are found on the X chromosome, which is considerably larger in size than the Y chromosome. • Genes on the X chromosome are said to be X-linked.

  14. Inheritance Patterns of Sex-Linked Traits • The gene involved in the white-eye inheritance pattern in fruit flies is located only on the X chromosome. • There is no corresponding gene for eye-colour on the Y chromosome.

  15. Inheritance Patterns of Sex-Linked Traits • Females have two X chromosomes (they are XX), therefore females carry two copies of every X-linked gene. • Males have only one X chromosome (they are XY) and so carry only one copy of the X-linked gene.

  16. F1 Generation F2 Generation

  17. Inheritance Patterns of Sex-Linked Traits • Since the white-eye trait is recessive, a female will have white eyes only if both X chromosomes carry the white-eye allele (XrXr). • If a male inherits a single copy of the white-eye allele on his X chromosome, as there is no other copy of the gene, he will have white eyes (XrY).

  18. Sex-Linked Disorders in Humans

  19. Sex-Linked Disorders in Humans Red-Green Colour blindness Hemophilia

  20. Sex-Linked Inheritance • A "carrier" is a female who is heterozygous for the recessive, sex-linked trait.

  21. Sex-Linked Inheritance • A female "carrier" who is heterozygous for the recessive, sex-linked trait red color blindness, marries a normal male. What are the possible phenotypes of the offspring?

  22. Sex-Linked Inheritance • Let XR represent the gene for normal colour vision • Let Xr represent the gene for red-green colour blindness

  23. Example • A female carrier for hemophilia has children with an unaffected male. What are the possible phenotypes of their children?

  24. Hemophilia

  25. Homework • Page 151 # 1 - 11

More Related