3.4 inheritance Flashcards
what is the difference between a gamete and a typical somatic cell?
GAMETES:
- haploid
- contain only 1 allele of the gene
- 2 alleles of each gene separate into different haploid nuclei during meiosis
what are the different types of zygosity?
- gametes are haploid, meaning they only possess 1 allele for each gene
- when male and female gametes fuse during fertilisation, the resulting zygote will contain 2 alleles for each gene
- exception: males have only 1 allele for each gene located on a sex chromosome, as these chromosomes aren’t paired (XY)
DIFFERENT TYPES OF ZYGOSITY: [combination of alleles]
- homozygous: if maternal and paternal alleles are same, offspring is said to be homozygous for that gene
- heterozygous: if maternal and paternal alleles are different, offspring is said to be heterozygous for that gene
- hemizygous: males only have 1 allele for each gene located on a sex chromosome and are said to be hemizygous for that gene
what is the difference between genotype and phenotype?
GENOTYPE:
- gene composition (i.e. allele combination) for a specific trait
- genotype of a particular gene will typically be either homozygous or heterozygous
PHENOTYPE:
- observable characteristics of a specific trait (i.e. physical expression)
- determined by both genotype and environmental influences
what is complete dominance for genes?
- most traits follow classical dominant / recessive pattern of inheritance, whereby 1 allele is expressed over the other
- dominant allele masks recessive allele when in a heterozygous state
- homozygous dominant and heterozygous forms will be phenotypically indistinguishable
- recessive allele will only be expressed in phenotype when in homozygous state
- when representing alleles, convention is to capitalise dominant allele and use lower case letter for recessive allele
what is co-dominance for genes?
- occurs when pairs of alleles are both expressed equally in the phenotype of a heterozygous individual
- heterozygotes therefore have altered phenotype as the alleles are having a joint effect
- when representing alleles, convention is to use superscripts for different co-dominant alleles (recessive still lower case)
outline the inheritance of abo blood groups
- human red blood cells can be categorised into different blood groups based on structure of a surface glycoprotein (antigen)
- abo blood groups are controlled by a single gene with multiple alleles (A, B, O)
- A, B, O alleles all produce a basic antigen on the surface of red blood cells
- A and B alleles are co-dominant and each modify the structure of the antigen to produce different variants
- O allele is recessive and does not modify basic antigenic structure
- when representing blood group alleles, letter I is used to represent different antigenic forms (isoantigens)
- A allele = IA ; B allele = IB ; O allele = i (recessive)
- as humans produce antibodies against foreign antigens, blood transfusions are not compatible between certain blood groups
- AB blood groups can receive blood from any other type (as they already possess both antigenic variants on their cells)
- A blood groups cannot receive B blood or AB blood (as the isoantigen produced by the B allele is foreign)
- B blood groups cannot receive A blood or AB blood (as the isoantigen produced by the A allele is foreign)
- O blood groups can only receive transfusions from other O blood donor (both antigenic variants are foreign)
what is the consequence of an incompatible blood transfusion?
- surface antigens (on rbc) + opposing antibodies (in blood plasma) –> agglutination (clumping) –> haemolysis (lysis / rupturing of rbc)
what are genetic diseases and what are the different types of genetic diseases?
- caused when mutations to a gene (or genes) abrogate normal cellular function, leading to development of a disease phenotype
- genetic diseases can be caused by recessive, dominant or co-dominant alleles
AUTOSOMAL RECESSIVE GENETIC DISEASE
- will only occur if both alleles are faulty
- Heterozygous individuals will possess 1 copy of faulty allele but not develop disease symptoms (they are carriers)
- example of autosomal recessive genetic disease is cystic fibrosis
AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT GENETIC DISEASE
- requires 1 copy of a faulty allele to cause the disorder
- homozygous dominant and heterozygous individuals will both develop full range of disease symptoms
- example of autosomal dominant genetic disease is huntington’s disease
CAUSED BY CO-DOMINANT ALLELES
- only require 1 copy of faulty allele to occur
- heterozygous individuals will have milder symptoms due to moderating influence of a normal allele
- example of a genetic disease that displays co-dominance is sickle cell anaemia
how is cystic fibrosis inherited?
- autosomal RECESSIVE disorder caused by mutation to CFTR gene on chromosome 7
- individuals with cystic fibrosis produce mucus which is unusually thick and sticky
- mucus clogs airways and secretory ducts of digestive system, leading to respiratory failure and pancreatic cysts
- heterozygous carriers who possess 1 normal allele will not develop disease symptoms
how is huntington’s disease inherited?
- autosomal DOMINANT disorder caused by a mutation to the huntingtin (HTT) gene on chromosome 4
- causes death in brain cells
- HTT gene possesses a repeating trinucleotide sequence (CAG) that is usually present in low amounts (10 – 25 repeats)
- more than 28 CAG repeats is unstable and causes sequence to amplify (produce even more repeats)
- when the number of repeats exceeds ~40, huntingtin protein will misfold and cause neurodegeneration
- usually occurs in late adulthood and so symptoms usually develop noticeably in a person’s middle age (~40 years)
- symptoms of huntington’s disease include uncontrollable, spasmodic movements (chorea) and dementia
why are genetic diseases rare?
- any allele that adversely affects survival and hence capacity to reproduce is unlikely to be passed on to offspring
- recessive conditions tend to be more common, as faulty allele can be present in carriers without causing disease
- dominant conditions may often have a late onset, as this does not prevent reproduction and transfer of faulty allele
what is sex-linkage?
- when a gene controlling a characteristic is located on a sex chromosome (X or Y)
- Y chromosome much shorter than X chromosome and contains only a few genes (50 million bp; 78 genes)
- X chromosome is longer and contains many genes not present on Y chromosomes (153 million bp ; ~ 2,000 genes)
- sex-linked conditions are usually X-linked - as very few genes exist on shorter Y chromosome
how do sex-linked inheritance patterns work?
- sex-linked inheritance patterns differ from autosomal patterns due to fact that chromosomes aren’t paired in males (XY)
- leads to expression of sex-linked traits being predominantly associated with a particularly gender
- human females have 2 X chromosomes (and therefore 2 alleles): can be either homozygous or heterozygous
- hence X-linked dominant traits more common in females (as either allele may be dominant and cause disease)
- human males have only 1 X chromosome (and therefore only 1 allele) and are hemizygous for X-linked traits
- X-linked recessive traits are more common in males, as condition cannot be masked by a second allele
following trends always hold true for X-linked conditions:
- only females can be carriers (a heterozygote for a recessive disease condition), males cannot be heterozygous carriers
- males will always inherit X-linked trait from their mother (inherit a Y chromosome from their father)
- females cannot inherit an X-linked recessive condition from an unaffected father (must receive his dominant allele)
- when assigning alleles for a sex-linked trait, the convention is to write the allele as a superscript to the sex chromosome (X)
explain red-green colour blindness as a sex-linked genetic disease
- X-linked RECESSIVE condition found on non-homologous region on X chromosome
- far more common in males than in females (males cannot mask the trait as a carrier)
- XA = unaffected (normal vision) ; Xa = affected (colour blindness)
- genetic disorder whereby individual fails to discriminate between red and green hues
- condition caused by mutation to red (OPN1LW) or green (OPN1MW) retinal photoreceptors, which are located on X chromosome
- red-green colour blindness can be diagnosed using ishihara colour test
- X^N : normal X, X^C: colourblind X, Y: y
- OPN1MW (green) and OPN1LW (red) alleles responsible for producing photoreceptive pigments in cone cells of eyes is found in locus Xq28 –> non-homologous region
explain haemophilia as a sex-linked genetic disease
- X-linked RECESSIVE condition
- far more common in males than in females (males cannot mask the trait as a carrier)
- XH = unaffected (normal blood clotting) ; Xh = affected (haemophilia)
- genetic disorder where body’s ability to control blood clotting (and hence stop bleeding) is impaired
- formation of a blood clot is controlled by a cascade of coagulation factors whose genes are located on the X chromosome
- when 1 of these factors becomes defective, fibrin formation is prevented - meaning bleeding continues for a long time
- different forms of haemophilia can occur, based on which specific coagulation factor is mutated (e.g. haemophilia A = factor VIII)