Turn in your genetics assignment to the tray
Other Inheritance Patterns
Unlinked Autosomal Genes Rr Y y
Linked Genes Rr Yy RYry RYRRYYRrYy ryRrYyrryy 3 round, yellow : 1 wrinkled, green
Crossing over can create recombinants
Hypothetical Linked Gene Data Round, Yellow – 93 Round, Green – 7 (recombinants) Wrinkled, Yellow – 7 (recombinants) Wrinkled, Green – 93 Recombination Frequency = recombinant total / total offspring 14/200 = 7%
Gene mapping Each % pt of recombinants = 1 map unit on the chromosome R is 7 map units away from Y RY 7 map units
Epistasis When 2 or more genes control 1 phenotype (gene-gene interactions) Remember – normal dihybrid cross of 2 heterozygotes give you a 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio If 2 genes show epistasis, this ratio can change
Examples Kernel Color in wheat If 1 allele of gene A or gene B is dominant, the wheat is colored The only individual that is white is aabb Ratio 15:1
Flower color in sweet pea Both genes need a dominant (functional) allele to create anthocyanin (color) Ratio is 9:7
Albinism in mice B gene – determines if mice pigment color is brown or black C gene – determines if any pigment is present at all
Pleiotropy When 1 gene has multiple phenotypic effects Examples –Vestigial wing gene also causes changes in the balancers, the direction of bristles, and the number of eggs in the ovaries –GAPDH – 1 st known for the metabolism of glucose, also known for the regulation of protein translation, aiding in the transport of RNA to cytoplasm, aiding in DNA repair and DNA replication
Polygenic (quantitative) Traits When multiple genes aid in the expression of a single trait Examples – height, coloration (skin color, eye color) Assumptions –Effects of each gene is additive –No dominance (incomplete dominance) –No linkage
Plant Height in Tobacco Plants 7 classes of height – 0 to 6 (depending on number of dominant alleles the plant has at 3 separate genes (A, B, and C) AABBCC (6) x aabbcc (0) yields all intermediate (3) heterozygotes AaBbCc Let’s look at the F1 cross –AaBbCc x AaBbCc
ABCABcAbCaBCAbcabCaBcabc ABCAABBCCAABBCcAABbCCAaBBCCAABbCcAaBbCCAaBBCcAaBbCc ABcAABBCcAABBccAABbCcAaBBCcAABbccAaBbCcAaBBccAaBbcc AbCAABbCCAABbCcAAbbCCAaBbCCAAbbCcAabbCCAaBbCcAabbCc aBCAaBBCCAaBBCcAaBbCCaaBBCCAaBbCcaaBbCCaaBBCcaaBbCc AbcAABbCcAABbccAAbbCcAaBbCcAAbbccAabbCcAaBbccAabbcc abCAaBbCcAaBbCcAabbCCaaBbCCAabbCcaabbCCaaBbCcaabbCc aBcAaBBCcAaBBccAaBbCcaaBBCcAaBbccaaBbCcaaBBccaaBbcc abcAaBbCcAaBbccAabbCcaaBbCcAabbccaabbCcaaBbccaabbcc
Polygenic Inheritance Graph
When Bad Things Happen to Good Chromosomes
Research - Disorders