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INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE, CODOMINANCE, MULTIPLE ALLELES, POLYGENIC TRAITS. BEYOND DOMINANT & RECESSIVE ALLELES. DOMINANT? RECESSIVE? NEITHER?.
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INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE, CODOMINANCE, MULTIPLE ALLELES, POLYGENIC TRAITS BEYOND DOMINANT & RECESSIVE ALLELES
DOMINANT? RECESSIVE? NEITHER? • NOT ALL GENES SHOW SIMPLE PATTERNS OF DOMINANT AND RECESSIVE ALLELES. IN MOST ORGANISMS, GENETICS IS MORE COMPLICATED, BECAUSE THE MAJORITY OF GENES HAVE MORE THAN TWO ALLELES. MANY IMPORTANT TRAITS ARE CONTROLLED BY MORE THAN ONE GENE.
INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE • PAIRS OF ALLELES PRODUCE A HETEROZYGOUS PHENOTYPE THAT RESULTS IN AN APPEARANCE IN BETWEEN THE PHENOTYPES OF THE TWO PARENTAL VARIETIES. • EXAMPLE: SNAPDRAGON COLOR
INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE • With incomplete dominance, a cross between organisms with two different phenotypes produces offspring with a third phenotype that is a blending of the parental traits.
INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE – Humans • HYPERCHOLESTEROLEMIA – DANGEROUSLY HIGH LEVELS OF CHOLESTEROL IN THE BLOOD • NORMAL INDIVIDUALS ARE HH • HETEROZYGOTES ARE Hh (1 IN 500) • HOMOZYGOUS INDIVIDUALS WITH hh (1 IN 1,000,000) 5X NORMAL CHOLESTEROL LEVEL
INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE PROBLEMS • YELLOW GUINEA PIGS CROSSED WITH WHITE GUINEA PIGS ALWAYS PRODUCE CREAM COLORED GUINEA PIGS. • A. COMPLETE THE PUNNETT SQUARE FOR THE CROSS BETWEEN A WHITE GUINEA PIG AND A YELLOW GUINEA PIG. • B. COMPLETE THE PUNNETT SQUARE FOR THE CROSS BETWEEN TWO CREAM-COLORED GUINEA PIGS. • C. GIVE THE PHENOTYPIC AND GENOTYPIC RATIO FOR THE OFFSPRING IN A AND B.
CODOMINANCE • BOTH ALLELES CONTRIBUTE TO THE PHENOTYPE OF THE ORGANISM • EXAMPLE: IN HORSES, THE ALLELE FOR RED HAIR IS CODOMINANT WITH THE ALLELE FOR WHITE HAIR. HORSES WITH BOTH ALLELES ARE ROAN BECAUSE THEIR COATS ARE A MIXTURE OF BOTH RED AND WHITE HAIRS
CODOMINANCE • With codominance, a cross between organisms with two different phenotypes produces offspring with a third phenotype in which both of the parental traits appear together.
CODOMINANCE PROBLEMS • 1. WHEN A RED BULL IS BRED TO A WHITE COW, THE COLOR OF THE CALF IS ROAN. • A. COMPLETE THE PUNNETT SQUARE FOR THE CROSS BETWEEN A RED BULL AND A WHITE COW • B. GIVE THE GENOTYPIC RATIO AND PHENOTYPIC RATIO OF THE OFFSPRING. • C. A ROAN BULL AND A ROAN COW ARE BRED. GIVE THE GENOTYPIC RATIO AND PHENOTYPIC RATIO OF THIS CROSS.
MULTIPLE ALLELES • MORE THAN TWO POSSIBLE ALLELES EXIST IN A POPULATION • EX. COAT COLOR IN RABBITS – DETERMINED BY A SINGLE GENE WITH AT LEAST 4 DIFFERENT ALLELES THAT CAN PRODUCE 4 POSSIBLE COAT COLORS • EX. HUMAN GENE FOR EYE COLOR
Human Eye Color • 3 known genes that • Explain typical patterns of green, brown, blue eye color inheritance • Hazel, grey and multiple shades of green, brown, blue are not explained – molecular basis unknown
Human Eye Color Genes • Human Eye Color Genes: • EYCL1 (gey) green dominant over blue • Green/blue eye color, • EYCL2 (bey 1) • EYCL3 (bey 2) brown dominant over blue • Central Brown eye color gene • http://www.athro.com/evo/gen/eyecols.html
MULTIPLE ALLELES • HUMAN BLOOD TYPES – CHROMOSOME 9 • ONE GENE, THREE ALLELES, PRODUCE 4 PHENOTYPES • A PERSON’S BLOOD GROUP MAY BE O, A, B OR AB • THESE LETTERS REFER TO 2 CARBOHYDRATES THAT MAY BE FOUND ON THE SURFACE OF RED BLOOD CELLS (RBC)
ABO BLOOD GROUP PROBLEMS • COMPLETE A PUNNETT SQUARE FOR: • HOMOZYGOUS TYPE A x TYPE O • HETEROZYGOUS TYPE A x TYPE O • HOMOZYGOUS TYPE A x HOMOZYGOUS TYPE B • HETEROZYGOUS TYPE B x HOMOZYGOUS TYPE A • HETEROZYGOUS TYPE A x HETEROZYGOUS TYPE B • HETROZYGOUS TYPE B x TYPE O
Practice problems • A TYPE AB MALE MARRIES A TYPE O FEMALE. • WHAT ARE THEIR GENOTYPES? • COMPLETE A PUNNETT SQUARE TO SHOW THE POSSIBLE GENOTYPES OF THEIR CHILDREN.
Practice problems • A TYPE A MALE MARRIES A TYPE B FEMALE. THEY HAVE TWO CHILDREN. ONE CHILD IS TYPE AB AND THE OTHER CHILD IS TYPE O. • WHAT ARE THE GENOTYPES OF THE PARENTS? • COMPLETE A PUNNETT SQUARE TO SHOW THE GENOTYPES OF THESE TWO CHILDREN AND FOR ANY FUTURE CHILDREN.
Practice problems • A TYPE A MALE IS MARIED TO A TYPE O FEMALE. USING PUNNETT SQUARES, EXPLAIN HOW IT WOULD BE POSSIBLE FOR THEM TO HAVE A: • TYPE A CHILD. • TYPE B CHILD. • TYPE O CHILD.
Practice problems • A TYPE AB MALE MARRIES A TYPE B FEMALE. USING PUNNETT SQUARES, EXPLAIN HOW IT WOULD BE POSSIBLE FOR THEM TO HAVE A: • TYPE AB CHILD • TYPE A CHILD • TYPE O CHILD • TYPE B CHILD
Practice problems • A TYPE AB MALE MARRIES A TYPE AB FEMALE. USING PUNNETT SQUARES, EXPLAIN HOW IT WOULD BE POSSIBLE FOR THEM TO HAVE A: • TYPE AB CHILD • TYPE A CHILD • TYPE B CHILD • TYPE O CHILD
Practice problems • A TYPE O MALE MARRIES A TYPE O FEMALE. • WHAT ARE THE POSSIBLE GENOTYPES OF THEIR CHILDREN?
Practice problems • A TYPE A MALE, WHOSE FATHER IS TYPE O, MARRIES A TYPE O FEMALE. WHAT ARE THE POSSIBLE GENOTYPES OF THEIR CHILDREN? • THE MALE FROM THE PREVIOUS PROBLEM HAS A BROTHER WHO IS TYPE B. WHAT IS THEIR MOTHER’S BLOOD TYPE? • THE BROTHERS IN THE ABOVE PROBLEMS HAVE A SISTER WHOSE BLOOD TYPE IS O. IS THIS POSSIBLE?
POLYGENIC TRAITS • TRAITS CONTROLLED BY TWO OR MORE GENES • EX. 3 GENES INVOLVED MAKING THE REDDISH-BROWN PIGMENT IN THE EYES OF FRUIT FLIES • EX. WIDE RANGE OF HUMAN SKIN COLOR DUE TO MORE THAN 4 DIFFERENT GENES CONTROLLING THE TRAIT
SEX-LINKED TRAITS • IN HUMANS, SEX IS DETERMINED BY THE 23RD PAIR OF CHROMOSOMES – THE SEX CHROMOSOMES! • THE SEX CHROMOSOMES ARE THE X AND THE Y CHROMOSOMES • XX – FEMALE • XY – MALE
SEX-LINKED TRAITS • MOST SEX-LINKED GENES ARE X-LINKED GENES. • WHY? THE X CHROMOSOMES ARE LONGER AND CONTAINS THOUSANDS MORE GENES THAN THE Y CHROMOSOME. • X CHROMOSOME CONTAINS 1098 GENES. • Y CHROMOSOME CONTAINS 26 GENES.
SEX-LINKED TRAITS • FOR EACH GENE EXCLUSIVELY ON THE X CHROMOSOME, THERE ARE TWO ALLELES OF EACH GENE • MALES, XY, HAVE ONLY ONE ALLELE • A MALE, XY, WITH A RECESSIVE ALLELE ON THE X CHROMOSOME, WILL ALWAYS EXHIBIT THAT RECESSIVE TRAIT BECAUSE THERE IS NO CORRESPONDING ALLELE ON THE Y CHROMOSOME.
EXAMPLES OF SEX-LINKED TRAITS • IN HUMANS: • Red-Green Color Blindness • Hemophilia • Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy • IN CATS • Calico coat color • IN FRUIT FLIES: • Eye Color
WORKING PUNNETT SQUARES • IDENTIFY EACH INDIVIDUAL AS MALE OR FEMALE ACCORDING TO THEIR SEX CHROMOSOMES • EX. XX or XY • THE LETTERS REPRESENTING THE TRAIT ARE PLACED AS SUPERSCRIPTS ABOVE THE X CHROMOSOME • EXAMPLE: XR or Xr
EYE COLOR IN FRUIT FLIES • THE GENE FOR EYE COLOR IS ON THE X CHROMOSOME. • THE ALLELE FOR RED EYES IS DOMINANT OVER WHITE EYES • PROBLEM: • IF A WHITE-EYED FEMALE FRUIT FLY IS MATED WITH A RED-EYED MALE, PREDICT THE POSSIBLE OFFSPRING
COAT COLOR IN CATS • Coat color in cats is an X-linked gene, with alleles for black and orange-brown • XBXB and XBY cats will have a black coat • XOXO and XOY will have an orange-brown coat • female cats with XBXO are Calico!!
Autosomal Dominant • Dominant conditions are expressed in individuals who have just one copy of the mutant allele. The pedigree on the right illustrates the transmission of an autosomal dominant trait. Affected males and females have an equal probability of passing on the trait to offspring. Affected individual's have one normal copy of the gene and one mutant copy of the gene, thus each offspring has a 50% chance on inheriting the mutant allele. As shown in this pedigree, approximately half of the children of affected parents inherit the condition and half do not.
Autosomal Recessive • Recessive conditions are clinically manifest only when an individual has two copies of the mutant allele. When just one copy of the mutant allele is present, an individual is a carrier of the mutation, but does not develop the condition. Females and males are affected equally by traits transmitted by autosomal recessive inheritance. When two carriers mate, each child has a 25% chance of being homozygous wild-type (unaffected); a 25% chance of being homozygous mutant (affected); or a 50% chance of being heterozygous (unaffected carrier).
X-Linked Recessive • X-linked recessive traits are not clinically manifest when there is a normal copy of the gene. All X-linked recessive traits are fully evident in males because they only have one copy of the X chromosome, thus do not have a normal copy of the gene to compensate for the mutant copy. For that same reason, women are rarely affected by X-linked recessive diseases, however they are affected when they have two copies of the mutant allele. Because the gene is on the X chromosome there is no father to son transmission, but there is father to daughter and mother to daughter and son transmission. If a man is affected with an X-linked recessive condition, all his daughter will inherit one copy of the mutant allele from him.
X-Linked Dominant • Because the gene is located on the X chromosome, there is no transmission from father to son, but there can be transmission from father to daughter (all daughters of an affected male will be affected since the father has only one X chromosome to transmit). Children of an affected woman have a 50% chance of inheriting the X chromosome with the mutant allele. X-linked dominant disorders are clinically manifest when only one copy of the mutant allele is present.
Famous Pedigree • The PEDIGREE of • Nicholas (Nikolia) II ROMANOV (last CZAR) of RUSSIA • (Nicholas Alexandrovitch); Knight of the Garter; (since he possessed Russia, he may be considered the wealthiest man ever)