1 / 32

MUTATIONS

MUTATIONS. Chapter 11.3, Chapter 12. Mutations. Mutation = change in DNA sequence Mutations can be caused by errors in replication , transcription , translation , cell division , or external agents

flower
Télécharger la présentation

MUTATIONS

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. MUTATIONS Chapter 11.3, Chapter 12

  2. Mutations • Mutation = change in DNA sequence • Mutations can be caused by errors in replication, transcription, translation, cell division, or external agents • Mutations in reproductive cells can affect potential offspring (ex: inheritable genetic disorders) • Mutations in body cells do not get passed onto offspring (ex: if an individual develops skin cancer)

  3. Types of Mutations • Point Mutations (base substitutions)= a change in a single DNA base pair • Frameshift Mutations (addition or deletion)= a single base is added or deleted from DNA

  4. If a mutation causes a change in the a.a. it’s called a missense mutation If a mutation does not change the a.a. it’s called a silent mutation If a mutation changes the a.a. to a ‘stop’ codon it’s called a nonsense mutation.

  5. Point Mutations (Base Substitutions) • THE BOY CUT HIS LIP AND ATE THE HOT DOG • Point mutation • THE BOY BUT HIS LIP AND ATE THE HOT DOG • GAC  TAC • GAC  GAG • Silent mutation is when mutation makes no amino acid change • CTT  CTG • Leucine  Leucine (No change!) Animation Quiz 14 - Mutation by Base Substitution http://www.sinauer.com/cooper5e/animation0404.html

  6. Frameshift Mutations • THE BOY CUT HIS LIP AND ATE THE HOT DOG • Insertion: • THE BOY CUT HIS SLI PAN DAT ETH EHO TDO G • Deletion: • THE BOY CUT HIS LIP ANA TET HEH OTD OG • http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072552980/student_view0/chapter9/animation_quiz_5.html

  7. Chromosomal Mutations = missing or extra pieces of chromosomes, switched pieces, extra chromosomes • occurs frequently in plants, “super sized strawberries” • Few C.M.’s get passed onto offpring because the zygote dies and doesn’t develop or the mature offspring cannot reproduce

  8. Mutation of genetic material will affect the proteins produced

  9. Cause & Repair • Some mutations are spontaneous • Mutagen = any agent that causes DNA change (ex: chemicals, radiation) • Cells have repair mechanisms and special enzymes that can fix incorrect DNA

  10. HUMAN TRAITS Chapter 12, Section 1

  11. Pedigree • Pedigree = map of inheritance of genetic traits from generation to generation

  12. www.zerobio.com/drag_gr11/pedigree/pedigree_overview.htm

  13. Karyotype • Chromosomes come in pairs, inherited from parents • Karyotype = a chart of chromosome pairs, can be used to visualize chromosomal abnormalities • Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes, 46 total chromosomes

  14. Autosomes = any chromosome that isn’t a sex chromosome • Human has 22 pairs (44 chromosomes) • Sex Chromosome = genes that determine an individuals gender (X and Y) • Male= XY Female= XX • Sex chromosomes are the last pair on the karyotype • Human has 1 pair (2 chromosomes)

  15. Common Chromosomal Disorders

  16. Recessive Heredity • Caused by recessive alleles • Attached earlobes, Cystic fibrosis (defective protein leads to excessive mucus production in lungs), Albinism • Individual will only display the recessive phenotype if its genotype is homozygous recessive

  17. Dominant Heredity • Caused by dominant allele • Freckles, Widow’s peak, Hitchhickers thumb, Huntington’s disease (brain degeneration, doesn’t appear until later in age), immunity to poison ivy • Individual will display the dominant phenotype if its genotype is heterozygousorhomozygous dominant

  18. When Heredity Follows Different Rules Chapter 12, Section 2

  19. Incomplete Dominance • Complete Dominance = one allele completely dominates over another • Incomplete Dominance = phenotype of a heterozygote is in between the homozygous phenotypes, appearance of a third phenotype • Do not use lower case letters, use prime instead (‘) apostrophe

  20. Codominance & Multiple Alleles • Both alleles for a gene are expressed in a heterozygous individual • Neither allele is dominant or recessive • Ex: Blood type • BLOOD TYPE.ppt • Blood type also shows multiple alleles, more than 2 alleles: A, B, O • Eye color also shows multiple alleles

  21. Sex Determination & Sex-linked Inheritance • Combination of sex chromosomes (X and Y) determine an individual’s gender • Males XY, X chromosome comes from mom & Y chromosome comes from dad • Females XX, both mom & dad give an X chromosome • Sex-linked Traits = traits controlled by genes on sex chromosomes

  22. Red-Green colorblindness • Hemophilia (blood doesn’t clot properly) • Male Pattern Baldness • Duchenne Muscular Distrophy (muscular degeneration leading to eventual paralysis)

  23. Most sex-linked traits are found on genes on the X chromosome(X-linked trait) because it is larger than the Y chromosome • X-linked traits display more in males because they only have 1 X chromosome, whereas females get 2 X chromosomes so they can be carriers of the trait but not display the phenotype

  24. Polygenic Inheritance • Characteristics that are influenced by several genes

More Related