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Chromosomes and Human Inheritance Chapter 12
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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
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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
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Sex Determination in Humans Sex of a child is determined by the father Eggs have an X chromosome; sperm have X or Y
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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)
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Karyotyping Karyotype A micrograph of all metaphase chromosomes in a cell, arranged in pairs by size, shape, and length Detects abnormal chromosome numbers
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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
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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
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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
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Fig. 12-4a, p. 188
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Animation: Autosomal dominant inheritance
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Animation: Autosomal recessive inheritance
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12.3 Too Young to be Old Progeria Genetic disorder that results in accelerated aging
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12.4 Examples of X-Linked Inheritance Mutated alleles on the X chromosome cause or contribute to over 300 genetic disorders
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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
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X-Linked Recessive Inheritance Patterns
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Animation: X-linked inheritance
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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
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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
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Duplication DNA sequences are repeated two or more times; may be caused by unequal crossovers in prophase I
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Deletion Loss of some portion of a chromosome; usually causes serious or lethal disorders Example: Cri-du-chat
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Inversion Part of the sequence of DNA becomes oriented in the reverse direction, with no molecular loss
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Translocation Typically, two broken chromosomes exchange parts (reciprocal translocation)
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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)
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Nondisjunction
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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
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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
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Turner Syndrome XO (one unpaired X chromosome) Usually caused by nondisjunction in the father Results in females with undeveloped ovaries
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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)
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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
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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)
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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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