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Chapter 10.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 10."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 10

2 10.1 The Chromosome Theory of Heredity
Chromosomes are located in the nucleus Factors (genes) are found on chromosomes Sutton discovered that genes are on chromosomes in 1902

3 Chromosome Theory of Heredity
States that genes are located on chromosomes and each gene occupies a specific place on a chromosome Only one allele is on a chromosome

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6 Independent Assortment

7 Chromosome theory of inheritance:Gene Linkage
Genes on a chromosome are linked together Inherited together – THEREFORE they do not undergo independent assortment

8 Linked Genes- genes on the same chromosome – inherited as a package
Height Gene A Flower color gene B Flower position gene C

9 Thomas Hunt Morgan Studied fruit flies – Drosophilia melanogaster

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11 Fruit Flies are excellent for genetic studies because:
Reproduce quickly Easy to raise Many mutations Have 8 chromosomes (n=4)

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13 Fruit Fly Mutations                                

14 Thomas Hunt Morgan began to carry out experiments with

15 Morgan looked at TWO traits
Gray bodies – G Normal Wings - W Black bodies – g Small wings – w

16 The flies mated….

17 The female laid eggs                                                   

18 GGWW ggww P1 x F1 GgWw 100%

19 Morgan then mated the F1 back to the recessive parent
GgWw x ggww Expected ratio – 1:1:1:1 25% GgWw % Ggww 25% ggWw % ggww

20 Morgan’s Actual Results
41.5% gray normal 41.5% black small 8.5 % black normal 8.5% gray small

21 Conclusion Gene for body size and wing color were somehow connected or linked Can’t undergo independent assortment

22 Linkage Groups Package of genes that are always inherited together
Chromosome One linkage group for each homologous pair Fruit flies – 4 linkage groups Humans – 23 linkage groups Corn – 10 linkage groups

23 So linkage groups explain the high percentages (41.5%) but
What about the 8.5%??????

24 The combinations that were expected would be:
17% had new combinations The combinations that were expected would be: Gray normal – GW or Black small - gw

25 P1 G G g g W W w w Dad Mom

26 F1 G g W w

27 g G g g W w w w F1 F1 F1 X Recessive Fruit Fly Heterozygous

28 The Offspring of the Cross
and W w w w F1 F1 41.5 % 41.5 %

29 Genes of the Heterozygous Parent
W W w w The homologous pair copied

30 The homolgous pairs pair up in Prophase and form a tetrad
W W w w

31 When they are lined up they can become twisted and switch genes
Crossing Over

32 So you could then have ….. G G g g W w W w switch

33 The other offspring of the cross
and w w W w F1 F1 8.5 % 8.5 %

34 The 17% that had new combinations are known as
Recombinants – individuals with new combinations of genes Crossing Over – gives rise to new combinations – Prophase I

35 Gene Mapping Sturtevant – associate of Morgan
Crossing over occurs at random The distance between two genes determines how often they cross over Genes that are close do not crossover often Genes that are far apart – cross over often

36 So…… If you know the frequency with which crossing over occurs then you can use that to map the position of the genes on the chromosome

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38 Frequency of crossover exchange...
                           is GREATER the FARTHER apart 2 genes are    is proportional to relative distance                                       between 2 linked genes    Relative distance is established as...        1% crossover frequency =                                   1 map unit of map distance        1%   CrossOver  Freq   =    1   centiMorgan

39 Sex Chromosomes One pair Female – XX Male – XY                  

40 Sex Linkage Stevens – made observations of meal worm chromosomes

41 Autosomes All the chromosomes except the sex chromosomes

42 Sex Determination

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44 Genes on Sex Chromosomes
Sex chromosomes determine a person’s sex Sex chromosomes also contain genes

45 Sex Linked genes A gene located on a sex chromosome Usually X
Example – Fruit Fly Eye Color So the gene for eye color is on the X chromosome and not the Y

46 Sex linked genes Male pattern baldness Hemophelia colorblindness

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48 Fruit Fly Sex Chromosomes

49 Females Males XRY XrY XRXR XRXr XrXr Red Eyed White Eyed

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51 Mutations

52 A change in the DNA of an organism
Can involve an entire chromosome or a single DNA nucleotide and they may take place in any cell

53 Germ Cell Mutation Occur in an organism’s germ cells (gametes)- can only affect offspring

54 Somatic Mutations Take place in an organisms body cells and can affect the organism

55 Lethal Mutation Cause death, often before birth

56 Good Mutations Some mutations can be beneficial – these organisms have a better change to reproduce and therefore have an evolutionary advantage Provide the variation on which natural selection acts

57 Chromosome Mutations

58 Are either changes in the structure of a chromosome or the loss of an entire chromosome or an addition Four Types (duplication, deletion, inversion and translocation)

59 Duplication – segment of a chromosome is repeated
Deletion – the loss of a chromosome or part due to chromosomal breakage – that information is lost

60 Inversion – a chromosomal segment breaks off and then reattached in reverse orientation to the same chromosome Translocation – a chromosome breaks off and reattaches to another nonhomologous chromosome

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62 Nondisjunction Some chromosome mutations alter the number of chromosomes found in a cell Nondisjunction – the failure of a chromosome to separate from its homologue during meiosis

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64 Gene Mutations

65 May involve large segments of DNA or a single nucleotide within a codon
Involve individual genes

66 Point Mutations – 3 types
The substitution, addition or removal of a single nucleotide Substitution – a point mutation where one nucleotide in a codon is replaced with a different nucloetide, resulting in a new codon Ex. Sickle Cell Anemia – sub. Of A for T in a single codon

67 2 & 3. Insertion and Deletions – one or more nucleotides is lost or added – have more serious effects

68 Frameshift Mutation When a nucleotide is lost or added so that the remaining codons are grouped incorrectly Insertions and deletions are frameshift mutations

69 THE FAT CAT ATE THE RAT

70 Polyploidy Condition in which an organism has an extra set of chromosomes 3N, 4N Usually fatal in animals Plants – usually more robust Caused by - Nondisjunction

71 10-3 Regulation of Gene Expression
As biologists have intensified their studies of gene activity, it has become clear that interactions between different genes and between genes and their environment are critically important

72 Gene Interactions Gene – piece of DNA – DNA codes for proteins
In many cases the dominant allele codes for a protein that works and the recessive allele codes for a protein that does not work

73 Incomplete Dominance When offspring have a phenotype that is in-between the two parents Occurs when two or more alleles influence the phenotype Example – flowers – four o’ clocks, snapdragons Alleles – R/R’, R/r, R/W, FR F r

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75 Red Flower

76 White Flower

77 Pink Flower Red mixed with white makes pink

78 Incomplete Dominance Example #2
Incomplete dominance is a half way between point. Halfway to dark blue is light blue.

79 Incomplete Dominance is not a blending.

80 RR rr Rr

81 Phenotypic Ratio: 1:2:1 Genotypic Ratio: 1:2:1

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84 Codominace Occurs when both alleles for a gene are expressed in a heterozygous offspring Neither allele is dominant of recessive Example – horse coat color

85 Horse Coat Color Red – HR HR White – HWHW Roan – HR HW

86 Roan – red and white hairs

87 Blue roan - The coat has white hairs and blue hairs

88 Polygenic Inheritance
Traits controlled by two or more genes Examples – height, skin color, coat patterns Phenotypes are seen in a range

89 Polygenic Inheritance
AB Ab aB ab AABB AABb AaBB AaBb AAbb Aabb aaBB aaBb aabb

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