1 / 28

DNA BANDING

DNA BANDING. What is DNA Banding?. A method used to identify multilocus DNA banding patterns that are specific to an individual. Karyotypes. Looking at Chromosomes. Why?.

norm
Download Presentation

DNA BANDING

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. DNA BANDING

  2. What is DNA Banding? • A method used to identify multilocusDNA banding patterns that are specific to an individual

  3. Karyotypes Looking at Chromosomes

  4. Why? • We can learn a lot by looking at chromosomes! They can tell us everything from the likelihood that an unborn baby will have a genetic disorder to whether a person will be male or female.

  5. How? • Scientists often analyze chromosomes in prenatal testing and in diagnosing specific diseases. Fetal cells from an unborn child are contained in the amniotic fluid and can be tested for hereditary disorders such as Tay-Sachs or Phenylketonuria.

  6. Discussion • Would you want to know if your baby had a disease? • What would be the benefits? • What would be the consequences?

  7. Chromosome Review • Chromosomes are compact spools of DNA. If you were to stretch out all the DNA from one of your cells, it would be over 3 feet (1 meter) long from end to end! You can think of chromosomes as "DNA packages" that enable all this DNA to fit in the nucleus of each cell.

  8. Humans • Normally, we have 46 chromosomes in each cell •  23 from our mother and 23 from our father.

  9. What is a Karyotype? • A karyotype is an organized profile of a person's chromosomes. In a karyotype, chromosomes are arranged and numbered by size, from largest to smallest. This arrangement helps scientists quickly identify chromosomal alterations that may result in a genetic disorder.

  10. How are Karyotypes Prepared? • To make a karyotype, scientists take a picture of someone's chromosomes, cut them out and match them up using size, banding pattern and centromere position as guides. Homologous pairs are arranged by size in descending order (largest to smallest) with the sex chromosomes (XX for female or XY for male) as the last or 23 pair. • Homologous chromosomes have genes for the same trait at the same location.

  11. Since humans have 46 chromosomes in their somatic or body cells, they have 23 pairs of chromosomes in their karyotype. • A person may have more or less than the normal 46 chromosomes on their karyotype. • Nondisjunction is a condition that occurs if chromosomes fail to separate in meiosis • Example: A disorder called Down Syndrome • A person with Down Syndrome will have 3 chromosomes in their 21st pair.

  12. Normal Female

  13. Normal Male

  14. Down’s Syndrome

  15. Turner’s Syndrome

  16. Klinfelter Syndrome

  17. Super Female

  18. Cri Du Chat Syndrome

  19. Karytype Practice • ____ 1. A. Normal B. Abnormal • ____2. A. Male B. Female

  20. Karyotype Practice • ____3. A. Normal B. Abnormal • ____4. A. Male B. Female • ____5. A. Turner’s B. Klinefelter’s C. Down’s D. Super female

  21. Karyotype Practice • ____6. A. Normal B. Abnormal • ____7. A. Male B. Female • ____8. A. Super female B. Turner’s C. Down’s D. Klinefelter’s

  22. Karyotype Practice • ____ 9. A. Normal B. Abnormal • ____10. A. Male B. Female • ____11. A. Down’s B. Super female C. Cri du chat D. Turner’s E. None of the above

  23. Karyotype Practice • ____12. A. Normal B. Abnormal • ____13. A. Down’s B. Klinefelter’s C. Turner’s D. Normal • ____14. A. Male B. Female • ____15. The genotype is: A. XXX B. XO C. XXY D. Normal

  24. Karyotype Practice • ____16. A. Normal B. Turner’s C. Klinefelter’s D. super female E. Down’s • ____17. This karyotype shows a: A. sex – chromosome disorder B. Autosomal disorder C. Normal karyotype

  25. Karyotype Practice • 18. A. Normal B. Abnormal • 19. A. Male B. Female

More Related