patterns of inheritance chapters 14 and 15 a. p. biology liberty senior high school mr. knowles

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Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

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Page 1: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Patterns of InheritanceChapters 14 and 15

A. P. Biology

Liberty Senior High School

Mr. Knowles

Page 2: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

How do you make a giraffe?

X

G. camelopardalis

Page 3: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Early Ideas of Genetics• Saw patterns of inheritance in people and

domesticated plants and animals.• Bizarre chimeras explained variation- not

true – heredity occurs within species.• Thought traits were “blended” from

parents.• Traits are transmitted directly- explained

by a seed “gonons” (Hippocrates) or “humuculus” (Leewenhoek)

Page 4: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Gregor Mendel (1866)

Page 5: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 6: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 7: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Wrinkled

Smooth

Page 8: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Pea Color

Page 9: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Why Peas (Pisum sativum)?• Many varieties or strains of plant.• These strains are true-breeding or pure

– produce the same trait generation after generation.

• The strains can be hybridized or strains crossed (T. A. Knight, 1790s).

• Can be self-fertilized or cross-fertilized.

Page 10: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 11: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Table 14.1

Page 12: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

• First, alternative versions of genes– Account for variations in inherited characters, which

are now called alleles

Figure 14.4

Allele for purple flowers

Locus for flower-color gene

Homologouspair ofchromosomes

Allele for white flowers

Page 13: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Gene

LocusBrown Allele

Blue Allele

Homologous Chromosomes

ACGTAC

ACGGCT

Page 14: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Some Terms• Locus (i)- position on a chromosome

where a gene is located.• Alleles- alternative forms of a gene.

Different genetic information for a protein.

• Phenotype- “form that is shown”- physical appearance of a trait.

• Genotype- the sum of an organism’s alleles.

Page 15: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Phenotype versus Genotype

Figure 14.6

3

1 1

2

1

Phenotype

Purple

Purple

Purple

White

Genotype

PP(homozygous)

Pp(heterozygous)

Pp(heterozygous)

pp(homozygous)

Ratio 3:1 Ratio 1:2:1

Page 16: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Some Terms• Dominant Allele- an allele whose

expression is readily seen; affects the phenotype more.

• Recessive Allele-an allele whose expression is less seen; affects the phenotype less.

• Homozygous- organism with two identical alleles at the same locus.

• Heterozygous- organism with two different alleles at one locus.

Page 17: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 18: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 19: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Summary of Mendel’s Crosses• A cross between homozygous

dominant X homozygous recessive, F1 progeny are all heterozygous, and resemble the homozygous dominant parent in phenotype.

• Two alternative alleles of a gene segregate randomly.

Page 20: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

A Testcross

Figure 14.7

Dominant phenotype,unknown genotype:

PP or Pp?

Recessive phenotype,known genotype:

pp

If PP,then all offspring

purple:

If Pp,then 1⁄2 offspring purpleand 1⁄2 offspring white:

p p

P

P

Pp Pp

PpPp

pp pp

PpPpP

p

p p

APPLICATION An organism that exhibits a dominant trait,such as purple flowers in pea plants, can be either homozygous forthe dominant allele or heterozygous. To determine the organism’sgenotype, geneticists can perform a testcross.

TECHNIQUE In a testcross, the individual with theunknown genotype is crossed with a homozygous individualexpressing the recessive trait (white flowers in this example). By observing the phenotypes of the offspring resulting from this cross, we can deduce the genotype of the purple-flowered parent.

RESULTS

Page 21: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Testcross (Backcross)• How can you tell if an organism

with a dominant phenotype is a Het. or Homo.?

• To determine whether an individual is a Het or Homo., cross the individual with a known homozygous recessive- Testcross.

Page 22: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Summary of Mendel’s Crosses• If cross or self-fertilize the F2 generation,

the result is a 3:1 ratio. • Crosses with individuals that are

heterozygous at one locus-Monohybrid Cross.

• The two alternative alleles segregate independently from one another and are distinct- Law of Segregation.

Page 23: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Law of Segregation• Alternative forms of a gene (alleles) are

discrete and do not blend in Hets.

• Alleles independently assort from each other into gametes.

• Each gamete has an equal probability of receiving either allele.

Page 24: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 25: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Do different genes also segregate independently?

• Examine crosses which involve two genes. (Ex. seed shape and seed color). Fig. 13.16, p. 282.)

• Crosses with individuals heterozygous at two different loci- Dihybrid Crosses.

• Genes assort independently in the F2 with a 9:3:3:1 ratio.

Page 26: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

YYRRP Generation

Gametes YR yr

yyrr

YyRrHypothesis ofdependentassortment

Hypothesis ofindependentassortment

F2 Generation(predictedoffspring)

1⁄2 YR

YR

yr

1 ⁄2

1 ⁄2

1⁄2 yr

YYRR YyRr

yyrrYyRr

3 ⁄4 1 ⁄4

Sperm

Eggs

Phenotypic ratio 3:1

YR1 ⁄4

Yr1 ⁄4

yR1 ⁄4

yr1 ⁄4

9 ⁄163 ⁄16

3 ⁄161 ⁄16

YYRR YYRr YyRR YyRr

YyrrYyRrYYrrYYrr

YyRR YyRr yyRR yyRr

yyrryyRrYyrrYyRr

Phenotypic ratio 9:3:3:1

315 108 101 32 Phenotypic ratio approximately 9:3:3:1

F1 Generation

Eggs

YR Yr yR yr1 ⁄4 1 ⁄4 1 ⁄4 1 ⁄4

Sperm

RESULTS

CONCLUSION The results support the hypothesis of independent assortment. The alleles for seed color and seed shape sort into gametes independently of each other.

EXPERIMENT Two true-breeding pea plants—one with yellow-round seeds and the other with green-wrinkled seeds—were crossed, producing dihybrid F1 plants. Self-pollination of the F1 dihybrids, which are heterozygous for both characters, produced the F2 generation. The two hypotheses predict different phenotypic ratios. Note that yellow color (Y) and round shape (R) are dominant.

A dihybrid cross:– Illustrates the inheritance of two characters

• Produces four phenotypes in the F2 generation

Figure 14.8

Page 27: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Law of Independent Assortment

• Genes located on different chromosomes assort independently of one another- Independent Assortment.

Page 28: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

How would separate genes located close to one another

on a chromosome be inherited?

Page 29: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Linked Genes-do not assort independently.

Page 30: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Was Mendel lucky?

Page 31: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Non-Mendelian Inheritance

Complex Patterns of Inheritance: How Genes

Interact

Page 32: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Incomplete Dominance• Red (CRCR) X White (CWCW)

Snapdragons

• F1 generation are all pink (CRCW)

• F2 generation is 1 red:2 pink:1 white

• Not blending, parental phenotype is recovered in the F2.

Page 33: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Incomplete Dominance

Red (CRCR) X White (CWCW)

Roan (CRCW)

Page 34: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Codominance• MN Blood Type: a single gene

locus (B) at which two alleles (M and N) are possible.

Genotype Phenotype

BM BM M blood group

BN BN N blood group

BM BN MN blood group

Page 35: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Codominance

• The MN phenotype is not intermediate between M and the N phenotypes.

Page 36: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Codominance• A,B,O Blood Type: a specific

locus (I) at which there are three common alleles (A, B, and O). They are modifying enzymes. They modify cell surface glycolipids.

Page 37: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Codominance in Blood Types

Enzyme Function

A adds a galactosamine

B adds a galactose

O does not add anything

Page 38: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

A, B, O, AB Blood TypesGenotype Phenotype

IAIA or IAIO + galactosamine,

Blood Type A

IBIB or IBIO + galactose

Blood Type B

IAIB + both Blood Type AB

IOIO neither added, Type O

Page 39: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Distribution of O Allele

Page 40: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Distribution of A allele

Page 41: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Distribution of B allele

Page 42: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

A “Typical” Antibody

Page 43: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 44: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 45: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 46: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 47: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 48: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Compatible Blood Groups• Donors and recipients must have matching

cell surface molecules.

• If not “self,” the recipient will produce proteins called antibodies to agglutinate (clump together) the donated blood cells.

• The foreign cell surface molecule is an antigen.

Page 49: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Agglutination Reactions

A Blood

B Blood

Page 50: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Agglutination Reactions

AB Blood

O Blood

Page 51: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Agglutination for the Rh or D Antigen

Rh Positive Blood

Rh Negative Blood

Page 52: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 53: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Blood Group CompatibilityBlood Type Antibodies Produced

A anti-B

B anti-A

AB neither antibody (universal recipient)

O anti-A and anti-B

(universal donor)

Page 54: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Rh Factor in Humans• Rh Blood Group: another cell surface

marker on RBC’s controlled by > 7 closely linked genes.

Genotype Phenotype

R R or R r cell surface marker (about are Rh+ 85%)

rr lack molecule, Rh-

Page 55: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Rh Factor in Humans• What happens when an Rh- female X Rh+ male?

• Offspring is possibly Rh+.

• If fetal Rh+ RBCs cross the placenta and treated as a foreign antigen.

• Anitbodies (IgG) cross the placenta and agglutinate fetal RBC’s- erythroblastosis fetalis

• Treat with Rhogam: anit-Rh antibodies and prevent maternal immune response.

Page 56: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Erythroblastosis fetalis

Page 57: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Genetic Diseases can be Mendelian Dominant or

Recessive

Page 58: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Autosomal Dominant Diseases• Homozygotes and Heterozygotes

can be phenotypically the same- both show disease phenotype.

• Lethal dominant diseases are less common. Why?

Page 59: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Autosomal Dominant Diseases

• Familial Hypercholesterolemia- most common; 1:500; 19p13.2-p13.1

• Huntington’s Disease- production of an inhibitor of brain cell metabolism; degeneration of nervous system at middle age; lethal dominant; 1:10,000; 4p16.3

Page 60: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Familial Hypercholesterolemia

QuickTime™ and aGIF decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 61: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

The Solution-Balloon Angioplasty

Page 62: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

A Stent

Page 63: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Marfan Syndrome- Dominant Mutation

• Marfan’s Syndrome- mutation in the fibrillin gene (glycoprotein in connective tissue).

Page 64: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Marfan’s Sufferer?

Page 65: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Mitral Valve Prolapse

Page 66: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Baby with Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Page 67: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Osteogenesis Imperfecta-autosomal dominant

Page 68: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Gene for Neurofibromatosis Type 2

Page 69: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Neurofibromatosis-Autosomal Dominant

Page 70: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Joseph Merrick-N. F. or Proteus Syndrome?

Page 71: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Baby with Achondroplasia

Page 72: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Achondroplasia- autosomal dominant

• Affects in 1:10,000.

• Heterozygotes have dwarf phenotype.

• Homozygosity is lethal.

Page 73: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Polydachtyly -dominant mutation at 13q21-q32, occurs only 1/400)

Page 74: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Autosomal Recessive Diseases

• Heterozygotes are phenotypically normal, called carriers.

• Only the homozygous recessive alleles are diseased.

• Lethal Recessive Diseases are more common. Why?

Page 75: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Cystic fibrosis-Autosomal Recessive• Most common Caucasian genetic disease-1:

2500 affected; 1:25 are carriers.

• Mutation in a chloride channel protein (CFTR).

• Leads to high [Cl-]in extracellular fluid.

• Causes mucus to become thicker than normal-favors bacterial infections.

• Untreated condition- death by fifth year.

Page 76: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Molecular Mechanisms of CF

Page 77: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

C F Lung

Page 78: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Tay-Sachs Disease• Recessive lethal allele-dysfunctional

hexosaminidase A; unable to metabolize gangliosides (lipids of the CNS).

• Lipids accumulate--> lead to neuron death and eventual death.

• Affects 1: 3600 European Jews.• Only the homozygotes are affected and

die.

Page 79: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Tay-Sachs Diseased Tissue

Page 80: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Tay-Sachs Disease-Autosomal Recessive

• Why are only the homozygous people affected? In other words, why is this disease recessive?

• Answer: the Heterozygote produces about 1/2 the normal amount of enzyme--> they are phenotypically normal.

Page 81: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Genetic Diseases are Codominant at the Molecular Level

• Sickle-cell Disease: a single amino acid change at #6 (Glu-->Val) in the 146 a.a. chain of hemoglobin.

• Mutant form of hemoglobin deforms the RBCs at low [O2].

• Multiple Symptoms: anemia, clumping and clogging of RBCs (heart failure and CV disease), spleen and kidney damage.

Page 82: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 83: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Normal RBCs

Page 84: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Sickle-Celled RBCs

Page 85: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Sickle-Cell Clumping

Page 86: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Removing Damaged RBC’s by Spleen

Page 87: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Frontal Bossing-Replacing the RBCs

Page 88: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

The Genetics of Sickle-CellGenotype Phenotype

A+ A+ normal (9/10)

A+ As Het. Carriers, usually normal, the two alleles are codominant; 1/10; resistance to malaria.

As As severe disease 1/400 African-Americans

Page 89: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Anopheles Mosquito

Page 90: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 91: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Malaria in a RBC

Page 92: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 93: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles
Page 94: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Dominance/Recessiveness• Range from Complete---

>Incomplete------->Codominance.

• Reflect the functions of the enzymes encoded by the alleles and not one allele subduing or overpowering another.

• Dominance does not determine the relative frequency of alleles in a population.

Page 95: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

And That’s Dominance and Recessiveness!

Page 96: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Other Patterns of Inheritance

Complex Gene Interactions

Page 97: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Multiple Alleles Possible for a Gene

• Incomplete Dominance or Codominance-

• Ex. Coat color in cattle; Red X White ---> Roan

• Ex. ABO blood type; the IA and IB

are equally expressed--> AB blood type.

Page 98: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Pleiotropy• When one gene or allele has multiple

phenotypes (pleion= many).

• Ex. Sickle-cell allele has many symptoms:

Breakdown of RBCs--> Anemia, Heart Failure, Physical Weakness

Clumping of RBCs--> Brain Damage, Kidney and Spleen Damage.

Page 99: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Pleiotropy• Often a gene functions in some other

unknown way.

• Ex. Lucien Cuenot- tried to develop a true-breeding yellow-furred mouse. Y= dominant for yellow fur color.

• Unable to get a YY strain. Why?

Page 100: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Pleiotropic Effects of YYy (Yellow Fur Color,

Dominant)

Y allele

YY (Lethal Development, Recessive)

Page 101: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Epistasis

• When a gene at one locus alters the phenotypic expression of another gene at a second locus.

Page 102: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Epistasis• Ex. Coat Color in Mammals:

One gene, the B locus:

B = black or b = brown

BB or Bb = both black, bb = brown

Another gene, C, deposits pigment into hair

CC or Cc = dominant for color

cc = no pigment deposited, albino

Page 103: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Genetics of Coat Color in Mammals

• What do the offspring of a BbCc X BbCc (dihybrid) cross look like?

• 9 Black : 3 Brown : 4 Albino

• What would Mendel predict?

• 9 : 3: 3 :1

Page 104: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Albinism in Humans

Page 105: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Another Example of Epistasis• R. A. Emerson, 1918, Zea mays

• Crossed two pure-breeding strains that never expressed purple pigment (anthocyanin) in seed coat. All of the F1 plants were purple!

• Crossed these F1 plants--> 56% of F2 purple, 44% were not. How?

Page 106: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Epistasis in Zea maysStarting Molecule (Colorless)

Enzyme 1

Intermediate (Colorless)

Enzyme 2

Anthocyanin (Purple)

Page 107: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Epistasis in Zea mays• Dominant alleles encode functional

enzymes and produce purple pigment.

• Recessive alleles encode nonfunctional enzymes.

• Requires BOTH dominant alleles for the purple phenotype.

Page 108: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Another Example of Epistasis- PTC Tasting

• Can two non-tasters produce a taster child?• Answer: Yes! tt X tt --> Taster Offspring.• I lied! This trait isn’t a simple

dominance/recessive trait.• Research suggests the phenotype is

controlled by two genes.

Page 109: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Polygenic Traits• These are not “either/or” characteristics,

but a continuum or gradation.

• Quantitative Characters-quantitative variation indicates polygenic inheritance- an additive effect of two or more genes on a single phenotypic character.

• Converse of Pleiotropy.

Page 110: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Polygenic Traits• Ex. Skin Color in Humans controlled by at

least three separately inherited genes.

Three Genes: A, B, C, dark-skin alleles, each contribute one “unit” of darkness and are incompletely dominant to the a, b, c alleles.

AABBCC = very dark

aabbcc = very light

Page 111: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Human Skin ColorAaBbCc = intermediate skin color

Alleles have cumulative effect; AaBbCc and AABbcc both make same three unit contribution to darkness.

Cross AaBbCc X AaBbCc

Page 112: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

AaBbCc X AaBbCc Skin Coloraabbcc 1/64 Very Light

Aabbcc 6/64

AaBbcc 15/64

AaBbCc 20/64 Intermediate

AABbCc 15/64

AABBCc 6/64

AABBCC 1/64 Very Dark

Page 113: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Polygenic Traits• Quantitative Characteristics- give a

bell-shaped curve, a normal distribution.

• Environmental Factors (sun exposure help smooth the curve also.

• Ex. Height and Weight

Page 114: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Multifactorial Inheritance• Environmental factors interact with genes.

• Genotype may be a phenotypic range or possibilities- norm of reaction for the genotype.

• The variation is due to environmental factors.

Page 115: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Multifactorial Inheritance• The norm of reaction may be

small- Example: ABO Blood type.

• Or it may be very broad- Example: the Number of RBCs--> physical activity, altitude, health, the genes that control cell division.

Page 116: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

• Hydrangea Flowers - of the same genotype range in color from purple (alkaline soils) to pink (acidic soils) due to anthocyanin.

• Cardiovascular Disease- ApoE gene (apolipoprotein E) and the angiotensin genes affect cholesterol levels and blood pressure levels--> genetic predisposition + lifestyle factors such as diet, smoking, physical activity.

Page 117: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

Some Defects are Multifactorial

Page 118: Patterns of Inheritance Chapters 14 and 15 A. P. Biology Liberty Senior High School Mr. Knowles

The End !