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PowerLecture: Chapter 12

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1 PowerLecture: Chapter 12
Chromosomes and Human Inheritance

2 Philadelphia Chromosome
1st abnormal chromosome associated with a cancer Causes chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)

3 Sex Chromosomes Discovered in late 1800s Mammals, fruit flies
XX is female, XY is male In some other groups XX is male, XY female Human X and Y act homologues

4 Karyotype Preparation
Fig. 12-3a-e, p.189

5 Karyotype Diagram Fig. 12-3f, p.189

6 Karyotype Preparation
Fig. 12-4, p.189

7 Autosomal Dominant Inheritance
Trait typically appears in every generation Fig a, p. 190

8 Autosomal Dominant Inheritance example… Achondro-plasia
Fig. 12-5, p.190

9 Achondroplasia Autosomal dominant allele
Homozygous usually leads to stillbirth Heterozygotes display a type of dwarfism (short arms and legs relative to other body parts)

10 Huntington Disorder Autosomal dominant allele
Causes involuntary movements, nervous system deterioration, death Symptoms appear after age 30 People often pass allele on before they know they have it

11 Autosomal Recessive Inheritance Patterns
If parents are both heterozygous, child will have a 25% chance of being affected Fig b, p. 191

12 Galactosemia Caused by autosomal recessive allele
Gene specifies a mutant enzyme in the pathway that breaks down lactose lactose galactose enzyme 1 + glucose galactose-1- phosphate enzyme 2 galactose-1- phosphate enzyme 3 intermediate in glycolysis

13 Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria
Mutation causes accelerated aging No evidence of it running in families Appears to be dominant Seems to arise as spontaneous mutation Usually causes death in early teens

14 The Y Chromosome Fewer than two dozen genes identified
SRY gene (sex-determining region of Y) is the master gene for male sex determination

15 The X Chromosome Carries more than 2,300 genes
Most for nonsexual traits Genes on X chromosome can be expressed in both sexes

16 Sex Determination diploid germ cells in female diploid germ cells
in male meiosis, gamete formation in both female and male: eggs sperm X x Y X X Fertilization: X X X XX XX sex chromosome combinations possible in new individual XY XY X Fig. 12-8a, p.192

17 Thomas Morgan Worked with fruit flies
Reciprocal crosses - 2 crosses where the trait of each sex is reversed Example - 1- White eyed male X Red eyed female 2- White eyed Female X Red eyed male

18 White-eyed males show up in F2
Thomas Morgan X X 1/2 Y Y recessive male all red- eyed F1 offspring 1/2 1/4 X X 1/4 1/4 X X 1/2 1/4 X X homozygous dominant female 1/2 gametes White-eyed males show up in F2 generation Fig. 12-9, p.193

19 Examples of X-Linked Traits
Red-Green Color blindness Hemophilia A Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

20 Hemophilia Fig , p.194

21 Duplication Gene sequence repeated several to hundreds of times
Can occur through unequal crossing over Can be found in normal chromosomes May have adaptive advantage Useful mutations may occur in copy

22 Duplication normal chromosome one segment repeated three repeats

23 Deletion Loss of some segment of a chromosome
Most are lethal or cause serious disorder

24 Deletion Cri-du-chat Fig , p.196

25 Inversion Section of DNA is reversed Usually not a problem for carrier
May cause problems in meiosis segments G, H, I become inverted In-text figure Page 196

26 Translocation A piece of one chromosome becomes attached to a nonhomologous chromosome Most are reciprocal Example - Philadelphia chromosome

27 Translocation one chromosome In-text figure Page 206 a nonhomologous
nonreciprocal translocation In-text figure Page 196

28 Duplications & Translocations
Karyotype comparing gibbon chromosomes to human chromosome regions. Fig , p.197

29 Chromosome Structure Alterations to chromosome structure are usually bad Duplications are adaptive: one gene functions normally - the other is free to mutate Chromosome structure evolves

30 Chromosome Structure Human n=23
Chimpanzees, gorilla, or orangutan n=24 During human evolution, two chromosomes fused to form chromosome #2

31 Chromosome Structure human chimpanzee gorilla orangutan
Fig , p.197

32 Aneuploidy Individuals have one extra or less chromosome
(2n + 1 or 2n - 1) Major cause of human reproductive failure

33 Polyploidy Individuals have three or more of each type of chromosome (3n, 4n) Common in flowering plants Lethal for humans

34 Nondisjunction n + 1 n + 1 n - 1 n - 1
chromosome alignments at metaphase I NONDISJUNCTION AT ANAPHASE I alignments at metaphase II anaphase II CHROMOSOME NUMBER IN GAMETES Fig b, p.198

35 Nondisjunction Fig a, p.198

36 Nondisjunction Down Syndrome - Trisomy 21
Risk of Down syndrome increases dramatically in mothers over age 35

37 Down Syndrome Fig , p.199

38 Nondisjunction Turner Syndrome- Monosomy X (XO)
Klinefelter Syndrome- XXY XYY

39 Fig b,p.200

40 Phenotypic Treatments
Symptoms of many genetic disorders can be minimized or suppressed by Dietary controls Adjustments to environmental conditions Surgery or hormonal treatments

41 Genetic Screening Large-scale screening programs detect affected persons Newborns in United States routinely tested for PKU Early detection allows dietary intervention and prevents brain impairment

42 Preimplantation Diagnosis
in-vitro fertilization At the 8 cell stage 1 cell is removed and its genes analyzed If cell has no defects, the embryo is implanted


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