Biology: Genetics Flashcards
Mendel’s 4 Principals
Gregor Mendel postulated four principles of inheritance.
1) Genes exist in alternative forms (now referred to as alleles). A gene controls a specific trait in an organism.
2) An organism has two alleles for each inherited trait, one inherited from each parent.
3) The two alleles segregate during meiosis, resulting in gametes that carry only one allele for any given inherited trait.
4) If two alleles in an individual organism are different, only one will by fully expressed, and the other will be silent. The expressed allele is dominant, the silent allele, recessive. In genetics problems, dominant alleles are typically assigned capital letters, and recessive alleles are assigned lowercase letters. Organisms that contain two copies of the same allele are homozygous for that trait; organisms that carry two different alleles are heterozygous. The dominant allele is expressed in the phenotype. This is known as Mendel’s Law of Dominance.
Dihybrid Cross
The segregation principle provides a satisfactory explanation for the inheritance of a single gene; however, if one wants to follow more than one gene pair, the dihybrid cross also developed by Mendel can be used. The principles of the monohybrid cross can be extended to a dihybrid cross in which the parents differ in two traits, as long as the genes are on separate chromosomes and assort independently during meiosis.
Incomplete Dominance
Some progeny phenotypes are apparently blends of the parental phenotypes. The classic example is flower color in snapdragons: Homozygous dominant red snapdragons, when crossed with homozygous recessive white snapdragons, produce 100% pink progeny in the F1 generation. When F1 progeny are self-crossed, the produce red, pink, and white progeny in the ratio of 1:2:1, respectively. The pink color is the result of the combined effects of the red and white genes in heterozygotes. An allele is incompletely dominant if the phenotype of the heterozygote is an intermediate of the phenotypes of the homozygotes.
Codominance
Occurs when multiple alleles exist for a given gene and more than one of them is dominant. Each dominant allele is fully dominant when combined with a recessive allele, but when two dominant alleles are present, the phenotype is the result of the expression of both dominant alleles simultaneously.
The classic example of codominance and multiple alleles is the inheritance of ABO blood groups in humans. Blood type is determined by three different alleles Ia, Ib, and i. Only two alleles are present in any single individual, but the popular contains all three alleles. Ia and Ib are both dominant two i. Individuals who are homozygous for Ia and heterozygous Iai have blood type A; individuals who are homozygous Ib or heterozygous Ibi have blood type B; and individuals who are homozygous ii have blood type O. However, Ia and Ib are codominant; individuals who are heterozygous IaIb have a distinct blood type, AB, which combines characteristics of both the A and B blood groups.
Sex Determination
The two members of each of the chromosome pairs are identical in shape except for one pair, the sex chromosomes. In sexually differentiated species, most chromosomes exist as pairs of homologues called autosomes, but sex is determined by a pair of sex chromosomes. All humans have 22 pairs of autosomes; additionally, women have a pair of homologous X chromosomes, and men have a pair of heterozygous chromosomes, an X and a Y chromosome. THe sex chromosomes pair during meiosis and segregate during the first meiotic division. Since females can produce only gametes containing the X chromosome, the gender of a zygote is determined by the genetic contribution of the male gamete. If the sperm carries a Y chromosome, the zygote will be male; X, female. 50/50 chance for either.
Sex Linage
In humans, women have two X chromosomes, and men have only one. As a result, recessive genes that are carried on the X chromosome will produce the recessive phenotypes whenever they occur in men because no dominant allele is present to mask them. The recessive phenotype will thus be much more frequently found in men. Examples of sex-linked recessives in humans are the genes for hemophilia and for color-blindness.
The pattern of inheritance for a sex-linked recessive is somewhat complicated. Because the gene is carried on the X chromosome, and men pass the X chromosome only to their daughters, affected men cannot pass the trait to their male offspring. Affected men will pass the gene to all their daughters. However, unless the daughter also receives the gene from her mother, she will be phenotypically normal carrier of the trait. Because all of the daughter’s male children will receive their only X chromosome from her, half of her sons will receive the recessive sex-linked allele Thus, sex-linked recessives generally affect only men; they cannot be passed from father to son, but they can be passed from grandfather to grandson via a daughter who is a carrier.
Environmental Factors
The environment can often affect the expression of a gene. Interaction between the environment and the genotype produces the phenotype. For example, Drosophila with a given set of genes have crooked wings at low temperatures but straight wings at higher temperatures.
Nondisjunction
Is either the failure of homologous chromosomes to separate properly during meiosis I or the failure of sister chromatids to separate properly during meiosis II. The resulting zygote might either have 3 copies of that chromosome, called trisomy (somatic cells will have 2N + 1 chromosomes), or might have a single copy of that chromosome, called monosomy (somatic cells will have 2N - 1 chromosomes). A classic case of trisomy is the birth defect Down’s syndrome, which is called by trisomy of chromosome 21. Most monosomies and trisomie are lethal, causing the embryo to spontaneously abort early in pregnancy.
Nondisjunction of the sex chromosomes may also occur, resulting in individuals with extra or missing copies of the X or Y chromosomes.
Chromosomal Breakage
May occur spontaneously of be induced by environmental factors, such as mutagenic agents and X rays. The chromosome that loses a fragment is said to have a deficiency.
Mutations
Changes in the genetic information of a cell coded in the DNA. Mutations that occur in somatic cells can lead to tumors in the individual. Mutations that occur in the sex cells (gametes) will be transmitted to the offspring. Most mutations occur in regions of DNA that do not code for proteins and are silent (not expressed in the phenotype). Mutations that do change the sequence of amino acids in proteins are most often recessive and deleterious.
Mutagenic Agents
They induce mutations. These include cosmic rays, X rays, ultraviolet rays, and radioactivity, as well as chemical compounds such as colchicine (which inhabits spindle formation, thereby causing polyploidy) or mustard gas. Mutagenic agents are sometimes also carcinogenic.
Gene Mutation
In a gene mutation, nitrogen bases are added, deleted, or substituted, thus altering the amino acid sequence; inappropriate amino acids may be inserted into polypeptide chains, and a mutated protein may be produced. Therefore, a mutation is a genetic “error” with the “wrong” base or no base on the DNA at any particular position.
Point Mutation
A nucleic acid is replaced by another nucleic acid. The number of nucleic acids substituted may vaery, but generally point mutations involve between one and three nucleotides.
Frameshift Mutation
Nucleic acids are deleted or inserted into the genome sequence. This frequency is lethal. The insertion or deletion of nucleic acids throws off the entire sequence of codons from that point on because the genome is “read” in groups of three nucleic acids. Since nucleic acids are inserted or deleted, the length of the genome changes.
Sickle-cell anemia
A disease in which red blood cells become crescent-shaped because they contain defective hemoglobin. The sicke-cell hemoglobin carries less oxygen. This disease is caused by a substitution of valine (GUA or GUG) for glutamic acid (GAA or GAG) because of a single base-pair substitution in the gene coding for hemoglobin.