Chromosomes:%20Vessels%20For%20The%20Genes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chromosomes:%20Vessels%20For%20The%20Genes

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Title: Chromosomes:%20Vessels%20For%20The%20Genes


1
ChromosomesVessels For The Genes
  • Timothy G. Standish, Ph. D.

2
Reasons Mendels Work Was Ignored
  • There was no Physical element in which Mendels
    inherited particles could be identified.
  • By the turn of the century, chromosomes had been
    discovered (physical particles) and biologists
    were better at math.

3
ChromosomesThe Physical Basis of Inheritance
  • 1866 Mendel published his work
  • 1875 Mitosis was first described
  • 1890s Meiosis was described
  • 1900 Mendel's work was rediscovered
  • 1902 Walter Sutton, Theodore Boveri and others
    noted parallels between behavior of chromosomes
    and alleles.

4
Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
  • Genes have specific loci on chromosomes.
  • Chromosomes undergo segregation (meiosis) and
    independent assortment,
  • Thus alleles of genes are independently assorted.

5
Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
Telophase II
6
Independent Assortment
As long as genes are on different chromosomes,
they will assort independently
7
Two Genes On One Chromosome
Telophase II
As long as genes on the same chromosome are
located a long distance apart, they will assort
independently due to crossing over during
prophase I of meiosis
8
Thomas Hunt Morgan
  • First to associate a trait (gene) with a
    chromosome.
  • Worked with fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster)
  • Why fruit flies?
  • Short generation time ( 2 weeks)
  • Survives and breeds well in the lab
  • Very large chromosomes in some cells
  • Many aspects of phenotype are genetically
    controlled.

9
Drosophila Mutations
10
More Drosophila Mutations
Wild Type
ebony body ee
white eyes ww
11
X Chromosome Human and Drosphila Genes Are Easy
To Find
  • In humans and Drosophila, males are XY
  • Thus males are haploid for the X chromosome
  • Because of this, recessive genes on the X
    chromosome show up far more commonly in male than
    female phenotypes

12
Morgans Discovery Of An X-Linked Drosophila Gene
A white-eyed male was discovered
13
The Key To Morgans Discovery
  • The key to Morgans discovery was the observation
    that all the white eyed individuals in the F2
    generation were males
  • Without this vital data on the association of
    white eyes with being male, the gene for white
    eyes could have been seen as a simple recessive
    trait on an autosome
  • This illustrates the importance of recording all
    the data possible and being alert to the
    possibility of interesting things being present
    in the data
  • Fate favors the prepared mind (Louis Pasture)

14
Human X-linked Recessive Genes
  • Brown enamel - Tooth enamel appears brown rather
    than white
  • Hemophilia - Two types
  • A - Classic hemophilia, deficiency of blood
    clotting factor VIII
  • B - Christmas disease, deficincy of blood
    clotting factor IX

15
X-linked Recessive GenesRelated to sight
  • Coloboma iridis - A fissure in the eyes iris
  • Color Blindness - Two types
  • Deutan - Decreased sensitivity to green light
  • Protan - Decreased sensitivity to red light
  • Congenital night blindness - Not due to a
    deficency of vitimin A
  • Mocrophthalmia - Eyes fail to develop
  • Optic atrophy - Degeneration of the optic nerves

16
Royal Pedigree
Edward Duke of Kent (1767-1820)
Victoria Princess of Saxe-Coburg (1786-1861)
Albert of Saxe-Coburg (18XX-18XX)
Victoria Queen of England (1819-1910)
17
Variation In Chromosome Number - Polyploidy
  • Polyploid individuals have more than two sets of
    chromosomes
  • Many important commercial plants are polyploid
  • Roses
  • Navel oranges
  • Seedless watermelons
  • Polyploid individuals usually result from some
    sort of interruption during meiosis

18
Variation In Chromosome Number - Aneuploidy
  • Polyploid humans are unknown, but individuals
    with extra individual chromosomes are known.
  • Having extra chromosomes or lacking some
    chromosomes is called aneuploidy
  • Aneuploid individuals result from nondisjunction
    during meiosis

19
Aneuploidy In Humans
  • Most human aneuploids spontaneously abort
  • The most viable variations in chromosome number
    are those that deal with the sex chromosomes
  • XO - Turners Syndrome - Phenotypically females
  • XXX- Super females
  • XYY - Super Males - On average tend to be
    larger and less intelligent
  • XXY - Klinefelters Syndrome - Phenotypically
    male
  • Of the non-sex chromosome aneuploidys, Downs
    Syndrome, extra chromosome 21, tends to be the
    most viable
  • Downs Syndrome is more common in children of
    mothers who gave birth after age 40

20
Gene Dosage
  • There seem to be elegant mechanisms for
    maintaining the correct dosage of genetic
    material in each cell
  • When aneuploidy causes a change in the relative
    dose of one chromosome, problems result

21
The Lyon Hypothesis
  • Having extra chromosomes causes problems (ie
    Downs Syndrome)
  • Men have only one X chromosome and they are
    normal (at least they think so)
  • Women have two X chomosomes and they are normal
  • Mary Lyon proposed that the extra dosage of X
    chromosome that women have is compensated for by
    turning off one of the X chromosomes.
  • This turned off chromosome can be observed as a
    Bar Body in metaphase female nuclei

22
Consequences of X Chromosome Dosage Compensation
  • Early during development, X chromosomes are
    randomly turned off in female cells
  • All daughter cells have the same X chromosome
    inactivated as their parental cell.
  • Thus, females are a mosaic of patches of cells
    some patches expressing the genes on the paternal
    X chromosome, other patches expressing the
    maternal X chromosome

23
Consequences of X Chromosome Dosage Compensation
At some pont (probably later than the 4 cell
stage) half the X chromosomes are turned off
Daughter cells inherit the mother cells
combination off and on X chromosomes
Because of dosage compensation, females are
thought to be a mosaic of patches of cells with
each patch expressing the same X chromosome, but
none expressing both chromosomes
Different patches of cells inherit different act
X chromosomes
24
Why Calico Cats Are Usually Female
  • Orange coat color is a sex-linked trait in cats
    (it is on the X chromosome)
  • A female cat heterozygous for orange, has skin
    patches expressing the orange X with the other X
    chromosome turned off. In other patches the
    opposite occurs.

25
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