1 / 46

Honors Biology Ch. 11

Honors Biology Ch. 11. Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity. I. Human Inheritance. - heredity in humans is the same as in other organisms - most genetic diseases are recessive and rare. A. Recessive Traits. - diseases caused by a single defective gene/protein 1. Cystic Fibrosis (CF)

una
Télécharger la présentation

Honors Biology Ch. 11

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. Honors BiologyCh. 11 Complex Inheritance and Human Heredity

  2. I. Human Inheritance • - heredity in humans is the same as in other organisms • - most genetic diseases are recessive and rare

  3. A. Recessive Traits • - diseases caused by a single defective gene/protein • 1. Cystic Fibrosis (CF) • 2. Tay-Sachs Disease • 3. Albinism • 4. Phenylketonuria (PKU) • 5. Sickle-Cell Anemia

  4. Woody Guthrie B. Dominant Traits • 1. Huntington’s Disease - rare, degenerative nervous system disorder

  5. 2. Achondroplasia • - a disorder of bone growth • - homozygous dominant condition is fatal

  6. 3. Polydactyly

  7. II. Other Inheritance Patterns • A. Sex Chromosomes: • - pair of chromosomes that determine an individual’s sex • XX - female XY - male • Autosomes:the other chromosome pairs except the sex chromosomes

  8. Human Chromosomes:44 Autosomes

  9. Human Chromosomes:2 Sex Chromosomes

  10. B. Sex-Linked Traits: • - trait controlled by a recessive allele on the "X" sex chromosome • - more common in males • - Ex. Red-green color-blindness, hemophilia

  11. Can you see a number?

  12. Queen Victoria’s Family

  13. Pedigree of Europe’s Royal Families

  14. C. Sex-Influenced Traits: • - trait controlled by an allele that is recessive in females and dominant in males • - Ex. Male-pattern Baldness

  15. D. Incomplete Dominance: • - a trait in which the heterozygote shows a blending of traits • - Ex. Carnations and Snap dragons: • R - red, W - white, RW - pink

  16. Incomplete Dominance: P R R Homozygous Red Parent W R W R W Homozygous White Parent Pink Pink W R W R W Pink Pink

  17. Incomplete Dominance: F1 R W HeterozygousPink Parent R R R R W Heterozygous Pink Parent Red Pink R W W W W Pink White

  18. E. Codominance: • - a trait in which the heterozygote shows both alleles equally • - Ex. Horses: • R - red, W - white, RW - roan • - Ex. ABO Blood Groups • A B AB

  19. E. Codominance: Roan Horses

  20. E. Codominance: ABO Blood Groups

  21. F. Polygenic Inheritance: • - traits controlled by more than one pair of genes • - Ex. hair, skin, and eye color

  22. dark brown light brown light brown blue AAbB AAbb AabB Aabb dark brown light brown light brown blue aABB aABb aaBB aaBb light brown blue blue light blue aABb aABb aaBb aabb EGGS Mother AB Ab aB ab AaBb black dark brown dark brown light brown Human Eye Color AB AABB AABb AaBB AaBb Ab Father SPERM AaBb aB ab

  23. Human Skin Color

  24. G. Epistasis - A gene at one locus alters the phenotypic expression of a gene at a second locus. - Example: black, brown, and white coat in mice

  25. BbCc BbCc  Sperm 1⁄4 bC 1⁄4 Bc 1⁄4 BC bc 1⁄4 Eggs 1⁄4 BBCC BbCC BbCc BC BBCc 1⁄4 bC BbCC bbCC bbCc BbCc 1⁄4 BBcc BBCc BbCc Bbcc Bc bbcc Bbcc BbCc 1⁄4 bbCc bc 4⁄16 9⁄16 3⁄16 Epistasis: Black, Brown, and White Coat in Mice

  26. H. Multiple Alleles: • 1. ABO Blood Groups: • - 4 blood types: A, B, AB, O • - caused by a protein in the membranes of red blood cells • - 3 alleles for this protein: IA, IB, i

  27. - Genotypes for the 4 blood types: • Type A: IA IA, IAi • Type B: IB IB, IBi • Type AB: IA IBUniversal Recipient • Type O: ii Universal Donor

  28. 2. Rh Blood Groups: • - an example of multiple alleles • - there are about 8 dominant alleles (+) • - one recessive allele (-)

  29. III. Nondisjunction: • - homologous chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis

  30. III. Nondisjunction: • - Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21) • - Klinefelter’s Syndrome (XXY) • - XYY Syndrome • - Turner’s Syndrome (Monosomy X) (X) • - Trisomy X (XXX)

  31. Down syndrome(Trisomy 21)

  32. 400 300 Number per 1000 Births 200 100 0 10 20 30 40 50 Age of Mother (years) Incidence of Down Syndrome

  33. Turner’s Syndrome (Monosomy X)

  34. XYY Syndrome

  35. Trisomy X (XXX)

  36. Klinefelter’s Syndrome (XXY)

  37. Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21)

  38. Normal Female

  39. Edward’s Syndrome (Trisomy 18)

  40. IV.Fetal Testing: • - Amniocentesis • - Chorionic Villus Sampling • - Ultrasound

  41. Amniocentesis

  42. Head Body Head Body Ultrasound image

  43. Ultrasound Of Fetus

  44. The End

  45. Human Chromosomes(23 homologous pairs)

More Related