1 / 38

CHAPTER 15

CHAPTER 15. CHROMOSOMES & HEREDITY. GENETIC HISTORY. 1860’S : MENDEL’S LAWS OF SEGREGATION AND ASSORTMENT 1875 : CYTOLOGISTS WORKED OUT PROCESS OF MITOSIS 1890 : MEIOSIS FIGURED OUT 1900 : THREE BOTANISTS REDISCOVERED MENDEL’S LAWS

Download Presentation

CHAPTER 15

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 15 CHROMOSOMES & HEREDITY

  2. GENETIC HISTORY • 1860’S: MENDEL’S LAWS OF SEGREGATION AND ASSORTMENT • 1875: CYTOLOGISTS WORKED OUT PROCESS OF MITOSIS • 1890: MEIOSIS FIGURED OUT • 1900: THREE BOTANISTS REDISCOVERED MENDEL’S LAWS • 1902: MENDEL’S LAWS AND MEIOSIS WERE STUDIED AND IDEAS CONVERGED

  3. CHROMOSOME THEORY OF INHERITANCE • ACCORDING TO THIS THEORY (DERIVED FROM THE WORK STATED) • 1) MENDELIAN FACTORS OR GENES ARE LOCATED ON CHROMOSOMES • 2) IT IS THE CHROMOSOMES THAT SEGREGATE AND INDEPENDENTLY ASSORT

  4. CHROMOSOMAL BASIS OF MENDEL’S LAWS

  5. EARLY 1900’S THOMAS MORGAN • MORGAN USED FRUIT FLIES TO STUDY CHROMOSOMES: THEY ONLY HAVE 4 PAIRS WHICH ARE EASILY SEEN WITH MICROSCOPE • MORGAN TRACED A GENE TO A SPECIFIC CHROMOSOME • THIS PROVIDED CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT MENDEL’S INHERITABLE FACTORS ARE LOCATED ON CHROMOSOMES

  6. DISCOVERY OF A SEX LINKAGE • MORGAN DEDUCED THAT EYE COLOR IS LINKED TO SEX AND THAT THE GENE FOR EYE COLOR IS LOCATED ONLY ON THE X CHROMOSOME. • WILD TYPE = NORMAL PHENOTYPE • MUTANT = ALTERNATIVE TO NORMAL • SEX-LINKED GENES = GENES LOCATED ON SEX CHROMOSOMES. THE TERM IS MOSTLY APPLIED ONLY TO GENES ON THE X CHROMOSOME

  7. SEX-LINKED INHERITANCE

  8. LINKED GENES • GENES THAT ARE LOCATED ON THE SAME CHROMOSOME AND THAT TEND TO BE INHERITED TOGETHER • LINKED GENES DO NOT ASSORT INDEPENDENTLY • A DIHYBRID CROSS FOLLOWING TWO LINKED GENES WILL NOT PRODUCE AN F2 PHENOTYPIC RATIO OF 9:3:3:1

  9. LINKED GENES MORGAN PROPOSED THAT THESE RATIOS WERE DUE TO LINKAGE. THE GENES FOR BODY COLOR AND WING SIZE ARE ON THE SAME CHROMOSOME AND ARE USUALLY INHERITED TOGETHER

  10. LINKED GENES MORGAN PROPOSED THAT THESE RATIOS WERE DUE TO LINKAGE. THE GENES FOR BODY COLOR AND WING SIZE ARE ON THE SAME CHROMOSOME AND ARE USUALLY INHERITED TOGETHER

  11. GENETIC RECOMBINATION • THE PRODUCTION OF OFFSPRING WITH NEW COMBINATIONS OF TRAITS DIFFERENT FROM THOSE COMBOS FOUND IN THE PARENTS; RESULTS FROM THE EVENTS OF MEIOSIS AND RANDOM FERTILIZATION • PARENTAL TYPES= OFFSPRING THAT HAVE THE SAME PHENOTYPE AS ONE PARENT • RECOMBINANTS = OFFSPRING WHOSE PHENOTYPES DIFFER FROM EITHER PARENT

  12. CROSSING OVER: RECOMBINATION OF LINKED GENES • IF GENES ARE TOTALLY LINKED, SOME POSSIBLE PHENOTYPIC COMBOS SHOULD NOT APPEAR; BUT SOMETIMES THE UNEXPECTED PHENOTYPES DO APPEAR • MORGAN DID A STUDY AND FOUND THAT 17% OF OFFSPRING WERE RECOMBINANTS, WHERE HE THOUGHT THE GENES WERE LINKED • CROSSING OVER ACCOUNTS FOR THIS RECOMBINATION (NOT KNOWN THEN)

  13. RECOMBINATION DUE TO CROSSING OVER

  14. RECOMBINATION DATA • SCIENTISTS USED RECOMBINATION FREQUENCIES BETWEEN GENES TO MAP THE SEQUENCE OF LINKED GENES ON A PARTICULAR CHROMOSOME • MORGAN’S DROSOPHILA STUDIES SHOWED THAT SOME GENES ARE LINKED MORE TIGHTLY THAN OTHERS • EX: THE RECOMBINATION FREQUENCY BETWEEN THE b and vg LOCI IS ABOUT 17%

  15. GENETIC LOCI • ONE OF MORGAN’S STUDENTS THEORIZED THAT THE PROBABILITY OF CROSSING OVER BETWEEN TWO GENES IS DIRECTLY PROPORTIONAL TO THE DISTANCE BETWEEN THEM • RECOMBINATION FREQUENCIES BETWEEN GENES WERE USED TO ASSIGN THEM A LINEAR POSITION ON A CHROMOSOME MAP • IF LINKED GENES ARE SO FAR APART THAT THE RECOMBO FREQ. IS 50%, THEN THEY ARE NO DIFFERENT FROM UNLINKED GENES THAT ASSORT INDEPENDENTLY

  16. RECOMBINATION FREQUENCIES ONE MAP UNIT = 1% RECOMBINATION FREQUENCY, SO 17% WILL EQUAL APPROX 17 MAP UNITS

  17. A PARTIAL GENETIC MAP OF DROSOPHILA

  18. SEX CHROMOSOMES • IN MOST SPECIES, SEX IS DETERMINED BY THE PRESENCE OR ABSENCE OF SPECIAL CHROMOSOMES • HETEROGAMETIC SEX = THE SEX THAT PRODUCES TWO KINDS OF GAMETES AND DETERMINES THE SEX OF THE OFFSPRING • HOMOGAMETIC SEX = THE SEX THAT PRODUCES ONE KIND OF GAMETE

  19. DIFFERENT CHROMOSOMAL SYSTEMS OF GENDER

  20. SEX DETERMINATION IN HUMANS • MALES ARE HETEROGAMETIC (XY) • FEMALES ARE HOMOGAMETIC (XX) • WHETER AN EMBRYO DEVELOPS INTO A MALE OF FEMALE DEPENDS UPON THE PRESENCE OF THE Y CHROMOSOME • SRY GENE: SEX DETERMINING REGION ON Y CHROMOSOME THAT TRIGGERS EVENTS THAT LEAD TO TESTE DEVELOPMENT; IN ABSENCE OF SRY, THE GONADS DEVELOP INTO OVARIES

  21. SEX-LINKED DISORDERS • SEX-LINKED TRAITS USUALLY REFERS TO X-LINKED TRAITS • THE X CHROMOSOME IS MUCH LARGER THAN THE Y, GIVING MORE X-LINKED TRAITS • MOST X-LINKED GENES HAVE NO HOMOLOGOUS LOCI ON THE Y CHROMOSOME • MOST GENES ON THE Y NOT ONLY HAVE NO X COUNTERPARTS, BUT THEY ENCODE FOR STRICTLY MALE TRAITS (EX: TESTIS)

  22. SEX-LINKED DISORDERS • FATHERS PASS X-LINKED ALLELES TO ALL THEIR DAUGHTERS ONLY • MALES RECEIVE THEIR X CHROMOSOME ONLY FROM THEIR MOTHERS • FATHERS CANNOT PASS SEX-LINKED TRAITS TO THEIR SONS

  23. SEX-LINKED DISORDERS • MOTHERS CAN PASS SEX-LINKED ALLELES TO BOTH SONS AND DAUGHTERS • FEMALES RECEIVE TWO X CHROMOSOMES, ONE FROM EACH PARENT • MOTHERS PASS ON ONE X CHROMOSOME TO EVERY DAUGHTER AND SON

  24. SEX-LINKED RECESSIVE • A FEMALE WILL EXPRESS TRAIT ONLY IF SHE IS HOMOZYGOUS • MORE MALES HAVE SEX-LINKED DISORDERS, AS THEY ONLY HAVE ONE X CHROMOSOME; FEMALES CAN BE A HETERZYGOUS CARRIER, BUT NOT SHOW THE TRAIT HERSELF • A CARRIER THAT MATES WITH NORMAL MALE WILL PASS THE TRAIT ON TO HALF HER SONS AND DAUGHTERS

  25. SEX-LINKED RECESSIVE TRAITS

  26. X-INACTIVATION IN FEMALE MAMMALS • IN FEMALE MAMMALS, MOST DIPLOID CELLS HAVE ONLY ONE FULL FUNCTIONAL X CHROMOSOME • EACH EMBRYONIC CELL INACTIVATES ONE OF THE TWO X CHROMOSOMES • THE INACTIVE X CHROMOSOME CONTRACTS INTO A DENSE OBJECT CALLED A BARR BODY

  27. BARR BODY • MOST BARR BODY GENES ARE NOT EXPRESSED • THEY ARE REACTIVATED IN GONADAL CELLS THAT UNDERGO MEIOSIS TO FORM GAMETES

  28. FEMALE MAMMALIAN CELLS • FEMALE MAMMALS ARE A MOSAIC OF TWO TYPE OF CELLS: THOSE WITH AN ACTIVE MATERNAL X AND THOSE WITH AN ACTIVE PATERNAL X • WHICH OF THE TWO X’S WILL BE INACTIVATED IS DETERMINED RANDOMLY IN EMBRYONIC CELLS • AFTER AN X IS INACTIVATED, ALL MITOTIC DECENDNTS WILL HAVE THE SAME INACTIVE X • IF A FEMALE IS HETEROZYGOUS FOR A SEX-LINKED TRAIT, ABOUT HALF OF HER CELLS WILL EXPRESS ONE ALLELE AND THE OTHER CELLS WILL EXPRESS THE ALTERNATE

  29. CHROMOSOMAL ERRORS AND EXCEPTIONS • MEIOTIC ERRORS AND MUTAGENS CAN CAUSE MAJOR CHROMOSOMAL CHANGES SUCH AS ALTERED CHROMOSOME NUMBERS OR ALTERED CHROMOSOMAL STRUCTURE

  30. NONDISJUNCTION • MEIOTIC OR MITOTIC ERROR DURING WHICH CERTAIN HOMOLOGOUS CHROMOSOMES OR SISTER CHROMATIDS FAIL TO SEPARATE • THERE ARE 2 MAIN TYPES OF NONDISJUNCTION: ANEUPLOIDY AND POLYPLOIDY

  31. MEIOTIC NONDISJUNCTION

  32. ANEUPLOIDY • HAVING AN ABNORMAL NUMBER OF CERTAIN CHROMOSOMES • WHEN AN ANEUPLOID ZYGOTE DIVIDES BY MITOSIS, IT TRANSMITS THE PROBLEM TO ALL EMBRYONIC CELLS • TRISOMIC = AN ANEUPLOID CELL THAT HAS A CHROMOSOME IN TRIPLICATE (DOWN’S SYNDROME) • MONOSOMIC- A CELL MISSING A CHROMOSOME

  33. POLYPLOIDY • A CHROMOSOME NUMBER THAT IS MORE THAN TWO COMPLETE CHROMOSOME SETS • IS COMMON IN PLANTS AND IMPORTANT IN PLANT EVOLUTION • TRIPLOIDY = THREE HAPLOID CHROMOSOME SETS (3N);MAY BE PRODUCED BY FERTILIZATION OF ABNORMAL DIPLOID EGG PRODUCED BY NONDISJUNCTION OF ALL CHROMOSOMES • TETRAPLOIDY = FOUR HAPLOID CHROMOSOME SETS (4N);MAY RESULT IF A DIPLOID ZYGOTE UNDERGOES MITOSIS WITHOUT CYTOKINESIS. SUBSEQUENT NORMAL MITOSIS WOULD PRODUCE A 4N EMBRYO

  34. ALTERATIONS OF CHROMOSOMES • CHROMOSOME BREAKAGE CAN ALTER THEIR STRUCTURE IN FOUR WAYS: • 1) DELETION = CHROMOSOMES LOSE A FRAGMENT LACKING A CENTROMERE • 2) DUPLICATION = FRAGMENTS MAY JOIN TO A HOMOLOGOUS CHROMOSOME • 3) TRANSLOCATION = FRAGMENTS MAY JOIN TO A NONHOMOLOGOUS CHROMO. • 4) INVERSION = FRAGMENTS MAY REATTACH TO THE ORIGINAL CHROMO. IN REVERSE ORDER

  35. ALTERATIONS OF CHROMOSOMES POSITION EFFECT - INFLUENCE ON A GENE’S EXPRESSION BECAUSE OF ITS LOCATION AMONG NEIGHBOR GENES

  36. HUMAN DISORDERS DUE TO CHROMOSOMAL ALTERATIONS • DOWN’S SYNDROME - TRISOMY 21 • PATAU SYNDROME - TRISOMY 13 • EDWARD’S SYNDROME - TRISOMY 18 • KLEINFELTER SYNDROME - USUALLY XXY, BUT ALSO XXYY, XXXY, XXXXY • TRIPLE X SYNDROME - XXX • TURNER SYNDROME = XO • CRI DU CHAT - DELETION ON #5 • CHRONIC MYELOGENOUS LEUKEMIA (CML)-TRANSLOCATION ON #22 WITH SMALL FRAGMENT ON #9

  37. GENOMIC IMPRINTING • CAUSES CERTAIN GENES TO BE DIFFERENTLY EXPRESSED IN THE OFFSPRING DEPENDING UPON WHETHER THE ALLELES WERE INHERITED FROM THE OVUM OR THE SPERM • PRADER-WILLI SYNDROME AND ANGELMAN SYDROME-SAME DELETION ON #15; SYMPTOMS DIFFER DEPENDING ON WHICH PARENT GAVE THE GENE • FRAGILE-X SYNDROME - AN ABNORMAL X CHROMOSOME, THE TIP HANGS ON THE REST OF THE CHROMOSOME BY A THIN DNA THREAD; MOST COMMON GENETIC CAUSE OF MENTAL RETARDATION; MORE LIKELY TO APPEAR IF X IS INHERITED FROM MOTHER

  38. GENOMIC IMPRINTING NOTICE, THE IMPRINTS ARE NOT PASSED FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION

More Related