1 / 44

BEYOND MENDEL

BEYOND MENDEL. Chapter 14. Mendelian Inheritance in Humans. Incomplete Dominance. Heterozygotes have intermediate phenotype i.e. Snapdragon flower color Notation varies widely, so on the AP test use the words “incompletely dominant”. Figure 14.9 Incomplete dominance in snapdragon color.

roy
Télécharger la présentation

BEYOND MENDEL

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. BEYOND MENDEL Chapter 14

  2. Mendelian Inheritance in Humans

  3. Incomplete Dominance • Heterozygotes have intermediate phenotype • i.e. Snapdragon flower color • Notation varies widely, so on the AP test use the words “incompletely dominant”

  4. Figure 14.9 Incomplete dominance in snapdragon color

  5. Figure 14.9x Incomplete dominance in carnations

  6. Codominance • Two alleles affect phenotype in separate, distinguishable ways • Both show up if both are present • i.e. checkered chicken feathers, ABO blood types • Blood type • Alleles IA and IB specify different enzymes that attach different sugars • IAIB - both enzymes, both sugars = codominance • ii – no sugars, no enzymes

  7. Multiple Alleles • Most genes have more than two allele forms • i.e. ABO blood types is also an example of a trait with 3 alleles for 4 different phenotypes • Alleles: IA, IB, i • Phenotypes: A, B, AB, or O blood types

  8. Figure 14.10 Multiple alleles for the ABO blood groups

  9. Figure 14.10x ABO blood types

  10. Principles of Dominance and Recessiveness Relationships • Ranges from complete dominance and various degrees of incomplete and codominance • Alleles do not involve the ability of one allele to supress another at the level of the DNA • i.e. round vs. wrinkled pea shape • Dominant allele codes for synthesis of an enzyme that coverts sugar to starch. • Recessive wrinkled pea, starch is not made, the sugar causes osmotic uptake of water and when it dries it wrinkles • Dominance does not mean “common” in a population • i.e. polydactyly is dominant

  11. Polydactyly is Dominant!!

  12. Pleiotropy • One gene affects an organism in many ways • i.e Sickle-cell disease and Marfan Syndrome • Marfan Syndrome is a mutation in the gene for fibrillin, a protein that occurs in connective tissue. It affects 1 in every 10,000 people • Skeleton • Heart and blood vessels • Lungs • Nervous System • Eyes • Skin

  13. Figure 14.15 Pleiotropic effects of the sickle-cell allele in a homozygote

  14. Marfan Syndrome

  15. Epistasis • Gene at one locus alters the phenotypic expression of a different gene at a second locus • i.e. Hair color in mammals: mice, labradors; comb shape in poultry • In mice, black (B) coat is dominant to brown coat color (b) • A second gene determines whether or not pigment will be deposited in the hair…dominant (C) for color results in deposition • If the mouse is cc, it will be albino regardless of the genotype at the black/brown locus.

  16. Figure 14.11 An example of epistasis

  17. Polygenes • Quantitative characteristics vary along a continuum in a population • Additive effect of two or more genes on a single phenotype. • This is the converse of pleiotropy! • i.e. Skin pigmentation is controlled by at least 3 separately inherited genes (A, B, C) that add together to determine the darkness of skin color • AaBbCc would have an intermediate skin color

  18. Figure 14.12 A simplified model for polygenic inheritance of skin color

  19. What would the genotype of a person with light skin color be? ____________ • What would the genotype of a person with very dark skin color be? _____________

  20. Environmental Effects • Nature vs. Nurture • genetic and environmental factors affect phenotypes • i.e. hydrangea color – affected by soil (pH, water, temp, etc.)

  21. Figure 14.14 Pedigree analysis • Reveals the patterns in human inheritance through generations in families

  22. Recessively Inherited Genetic Disorders • Allele that causes a genetic disorder codes either for a malfunctioned protein or for no protein at all • Heterozygotes produce a sufficient amount of the specific protein • Carriers because they can transmit the recessive allele to their offspring • They do not have the disease • To have the disorder, one must be homozygous recessive

  23. Recessively Inherited Genetic Disorders • Albinism • Cystic Fibrosis • Tay-Sachs • ALS (Lou Gehrig’s) • Sickle Cell Anemia • Phenylketonuria (PKU) • Alkaptonuria

  24. Amyotropic Lateral Sclerosis (Lou Gerhig’s Disease) • Neurodegenerative – degradation of motor nerves that control voluntary • Leads to twitching, denervation, atrophy – loss of all movement • Mutation on chromosome 21 • 1-2 of 100,000 people/year

  25. Tay-Sachs Disease Heterozygotes resistant to tuberculosis

  26. Sickle Cell Anemia

  27. Sickle cell patients resistant to malaria

  28. Cystic Fibrosis Heterozygotes resistant to cholera

  29. Dominantly Inherited Genetic Disorders • Offspring have a 50% chance of receiving the dominant allele. • Most lethal dominant alleles have survived in the population b/c late onset • Achondroplasia • Huntington’s disease • Progeria • Marfan syndrome

  30. Multifactorial Disorders • Have a genetic component and a significant environmental influence • i.e. • Heart disease • Cancer • Diabetes • Alcoholism • Schizophrenia • Manic-depressive disorder

  31. Genetic Testing and Counseling • Amniocentesis • 14th -16th week of pregnancy, needle inserted into uterus and extracts 10ml of amniotic fluid, fetal cells are cultured for several weeks then karyotyped • Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS) • 8-10 weeks of pregnancy, narrow tube inserted vaginally that suctions out sample of fetal tissue from placenta; immediate karyotyping • Newborn Screening • used for many diseases such as PKU

  32. PKU: Phenylketonuria

  33. Figure 14.17 Testing a fetus for genetic disorders

More Related