Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles. Mutant Hunt - independently isolate number of mutants with identical phenotypes - verify mutant phenotype is recessive - establish pure-breeding strain for each How many genes are involved? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

Mutant Hunt - independently isolate number of mutants

with identical phenotypes - verify mutant phenotype is recessive - establish pure-breeding strain for each

How many genes are involved? The same gene for all strains? Different genes for different strains?

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

Mutant Hunt Ex. White flowers in plant species with purple flowers Mutant strain 1 - isolated in Australia Mutant strain 2 - isolated in Pennsylvania

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

Biochemical basis for white flower color

If only one gene involved: (A or a alleles) Enzyme AWhite pigment Purple pigment

If two different genes involved: (Aa and Bb) Enzyme A Enzyme BWhite White Purple pigment

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

Complementation Test - One gene or Two genes?

Cross recessive pure-breeding strains with same(or related) phenotype to each other.

If F1 progeny are all mutant = one gene (two alleles)

If F1 progeny are wild type = two different genes

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

Complementation Test - One gene or Two genes?

Alleles of the same gene

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Identifying Genes and Defining Alleles

Complementation Test - One gene or Two genes?

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Complementation Analysis

Independently isolated mutants - all same phenotype Cross in all possible combinations

+ wild-type offspring (complementation) - mutant offspring

How many genes?

Which mutantsare defective in same gene?

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Multiple Alleles

Many different forms of the same gene

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Multiple Alleles

Example

Cross A x BAnything possible

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Multiple Alleles

Example

w gene

wild-type,white,eosinalleles

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Multiple Alleles

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Multiple Alleles

Humans are highly polymorphic Ex. >200 different alleles for cystic fibrosis gene Ex. >390 alleles for human leukocyte antigen (HLA)

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Dominance of Alleles

Complete Dominance / Complete Recessiveness

Phenotype: Dominant RecessiveGenotype: AA, Aa aa

Haplo-Sufficient

Loss ofFunction

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Dominance of Alleles

Incomplete Dominance (Semidominance)

Haplo-insufficient

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Dominance of Alleles

Co-dominance

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Dominance of Alleles

Sickle cell anemia

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Lethal Genes

Dominant lethal: L- (LL or Ll) doesn’t survive, rare

Ex. Huntington chorea - neurodegenerative, late onset

Recessive lethal: ll homozygotes die

Ex. Achondroplastic dwarfism

a+a+ normal a+ ad dwarf ad ad die in utero

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Examples of Recessive Lethal Genes

Creeper Chickens: Autosomal lethal

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Examples of Recessive Lethal Genes

2:1 ratio

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Subvital Genes

Survival of genotype is not as good as normal

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

Variations of Mendelian Dihybrid Ratios: Two genes involved

A- B- aaB- A-bb aabb

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

Comb shapes

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

Bateson & Punnett crossed purebreeding chickens

How many genes are involved?

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

9:3:3:1

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

Flower Color in Sweet Peas - Complementation

9:7 ratio

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Gene Interactions & Modified Ratios

Fruit shape in summer squash

9:6:1 ratio

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Epistasis

One gene masks the expression of another gene

aa B- A- B-

Recessive Dominant

Gene masking other = epistatic

Gene being masked = hypostatic

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Recessive Epistasis

Ex. Coat color in mice

C- color, cc none A- pattern, aa none

9:3:4ratio

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Recessive Epistasis

Ex. Coat color in Labrador retrievers

EeBb x EeBb 9/16 black: 3/16 brown:4/16 yellow

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Dominant Epistasis

Ex. Fruit color in summer squash

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Dominant Epistasis

Ex. Fruit color in summer squash

Hypothetical pathway

ww

ww

Y-

yy

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Dominant Epistasis

Ex. Graying in horses

4 years

7 years

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Gene Interactions: Eye Color in Drosophila

bw+ bw st+ st w+ w

bw+ bw st+ st w+ w

bw+ - st+ - w+ -

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Gene Interactions: Eye Color in Drosophila

bw+ bw st+ st w+ w X bw+ bw st+ st w+ w

bw+- st+- w+-

bw+- st+- ww

bw+- stst w+-

bwbw st+- w+-

bw+- stst ww

bwbw st+- ww

bwbw stst w+-

bwbw stst ww

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Suppression

Second gene blocks mutant phenotype caused by first gene

Normal plant - no malvidin; K- malvidin, kk none; D- suppresses K-, dd no suppression

13:3 ratio

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Modifier Gene

Second gene affects degree of expression of first gene

Ex. dark color versus light color

B- black, bb brown D- intense color, dd dilute color

9:3:3:1 ratio

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Duplicate Genes

Both genes control the same cellular activity

Ex. A1- or A2 - round fruit a1a1 and a2a2 narrow fruit

Enz A1narrow round

Enz A2

A1a1 A2a2 x A1a1 A2a2

9/16 A1- A2-: 3/16 A1- a2a2: 3/16 a1a1 A2-: 1/16 a1a1 a2a2

15 : 1 ratio of round : narrow

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Pleiotropic Genes

One gene has many effects on the phenotype

Ex. Cystic fibrosis - recessive allele, autosomal gene defective calcium transportbreathing difficultiesdigestive problemsreproductive deficienciesreduced immunity

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Penetrance

Percentage of individuals with certain genotype who express the expected phenotype.

brachydactyly

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Expressivity

Degree or extent to which a given genotype is expressed.

Variations may result from:environmentgenetic backgroundother factors

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Variable Expressivity

Spotting in dogs

All have the same genotype

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Variable Expressivity

Neurofibromatosis

café au lait spots

freckling

neurofibromas

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Penetrance and Expressivity

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Monogenic vs Quantitative Traits

Discontinuous traits Continuous traits

AA Aa aa aabbccdd AABBCCDD As gene number increases, phenotype distribution approaches normal curve

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Quantitative Genetics

Polygenic - Many genes affect one aspect of phenotype

Quantitative traits - each allele of each gene contributes equally

Ex. height, weight, skin color

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Quantitative Genetics

Two genes contributing to phenotype quantitatively

F2 ratio

1:4:6:4:1

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Quantitative Genetics

Inheritance of ear length in corn

F1 mean =intermediate

More variabilityin F2