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Chromosomes and Human Inheritance Chapter 12. Impacts, Issues: Strange Genes, Tortured Minds  Exceptional creativity often accompanies neurobiological.

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Presentation on theme: "Chromosomes and Human Inheritance Chapter 12. Impacts, Issues: Strange Genes, Tortured Minds  Exceptional creativity often accompanies neurobiological."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chromosomes and Human Inheritance Chapter 12

2 Impacts, Issues: Strange Genes, Tortured Minds  Exceptional creativity often accompanies neurobiological disorders such as schizophrenia, autism, chronic depression, and bipolar disorder Examples: Lincoln, Woolf, and Picasso

3 12.1 Human Chromosomes  In humans, two sex chromosomes are the basis of sex – human males have XY sex chromosomes, females have XX  All other human chromosomes are autosomes

4 Sex Determination in Humans  Sex of a child is determined by the father Eggs have an X chromosome; sperm have X or Y

5 Sex Determination in Humans  The SRY gene on the Y chromosome is the master gene for male sex determination Triggers formation of testes, which produce the male sex hormone (testosterone)

6 Karyotyping  Karyotype A micrograph of all metaphase chromosomes in a cell, arranged in pairs by size, shape, and length Detects abnormal chromosome numbers

7 12.2 Autosomal Inheritance Patterns  Many human traits can be traced to autosomal dominant or recessive alleles that are inherited  Some of those alleles cause genetic disorders

8 Autosomal Dominant Inheritance  A dominant allele is expressed in homozygotes and heterozygotes With one homozygous recessive and one heterozygous parent, children have a 50% chance of inheriting and displaying the trait

9 Autosomal Recessive Inheritance  Autosomal recessive alleles are expressed only in homozygotes; heterozygotes are carriers and do not have the trait A child of two carriers has a 25% chance of expressing the trait

10 Fig. 12-4a, p. 188

11 Animation: Autosomal dominant inheritance

12 Animation: Autosomal recessive inheritance

13 12.3 Too Young to be Old  Progeria Genetic disorder that results in accelerated aging

14 12.4 Examples of X-Linked Inheritance  Mutated alleles on the X chromosome cause or contribute to over 300 genetic disorders

15 X-Linked Inheritance Patterns  More males than females have X-linked recessive genetic disorders Males have only one X chromosome and can express a single recessive allele

16 X-Linked Recessive Inheritance Patterns

17 Animation: X-linked inheritance

18 Some X-Linked Recessive Disorders  Hemophilia A Bleeding caused by lack of blood-clotting protein  Duchenne muscular dystrophy Degeneration of muscles caused by lack of the structural protein dystrophin

19 12.5 Heritable Changes in Chromosome Structure  On rare occasions, a chromosome’s structure changes; such changes are usually harmful or lethal, rarely neutral or beneficial  A segment of a chromosome may be duplicated, deleted, inverted, or translocated

20 Duplication  DNA sequences are repeated two or more times; may be caused by unequal crossovers in prophase I

21 Deletion  Loss of some portion of a chromosome; usually causes serious or lethal disorders Example: Cri-du-chat

22 Inversion  Part of the sequence of DNA becomes oriented in the reverse direction, with no molecular loss

23 Translocation  Typically, two broken chromosomes exchange parts (reciprocal translocation)

24 Nondisjunction  Changes in chromosome number can be caused by nondisjunction, when a pair of chromosomes fails to separate properly during mitosis or meiosis  Affects the chromosome number at fertilization Monosomy (n-1) Trisomy (n+1)

25 Nondisjunction

26 Autosomal Change and Down Syndrome  Only trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) allows survival to adulthood Characteristics include physical appearance, mental impairment, and heart defects  Incidence of nondisjunction increases with maternal age

27 Change in Sex Chromosome Number  Changes in sex chromosome number may impair learning or motor skills, or be undetected  Female sex chromosome abnormalities Turner syndrome (XO) XXX syndrome (three or more X chromosomes)  Male sex chromosome abnormalities Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) XYY syndrome

28 Turner Syndrome  XO (one unpaired X chromosome) Usually caused by nondisjunction in the father Results in females with undeveloped ovaries

29 Defining Genetic Disorders and Abnormalities  Genetic disorder An inherited condition that causes mild to severe medical problems, characterized by a specific set of symptoms (a syndrome)

30 12.8 Prospects in Human Genetics  Genetic analysis can provide parents with information about their future children  Genetic counseling Starts with parental genotypes, and genetic testing for known disorders Information is used to predict the probability of having a child with a genetic disorder

31 Prenatal Diagnosis  Tests done on an embryo or fetus before birth to screen for sex or genetic problems  Three types of prenatal diagnosis Amniocentesis Chorionic villus sampling (CVS)

32 After Preimplantation Diagnosis  When a severe problem is diagnosed, some parents choose an induced abortion  In some cases; surgery, prescription drugs, hormone replacement therapy, or dietary controls can minimize or eliminate symptoms of a genetic disorder


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