Welcome to Human Heredity!faculty.sdmiramar.edu/bhaidar/bhaidar 210A web uploads/Bio 130... · Two...

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Welcome to Human Heredity! Definitions Heredity transmission of genetic factors from parents or ancestors to offspring or next generation Genetics- the field of biology that studies heredity

Transcript of Welcome to Human Heredity!faculty.sdmiramar.edu/bhaidar/bhaidar 210A web uploads/Bio 130... · Two...

Welcome to Human Heredity!

DefinitionsHeredity transmission of genetic factors from

parents or ancestors to offspring or next generation

Genetics- the field of biology that studies heredity

Biological Themes (outline)

1. Themes of Biology2. Themes of Genetics

3. New terminology

The Cell Theory:

A cell is the basic unit of biological structure and function

All cells arise from preexisting cells

Two Types of cells on earth differ in size and complexity

– Eukaryotic (True…) cells:

– Prokaryotic (Before…) cells:

Nucleus(contains DNA)

Eukar yotic cell

Prokar yotic cell

DNA(no nucleus)

Organelles

25,0

00 ×

100 X

nucleuscytoplasm

Sperm cell

NucleicontainingDNA

Egg cell

Fertilized eggwith DNA fromboth parents

(Zygote)

Embyro’s cells with copies of inherited DNA

Offspring with traitsinherited fromboth parents

Human DevelopmentFrom single cells into a large multi-cellular organism

Unspecialized cells

Different specialized

cells

Cells• All cells of the body contain the same genetic material

made of DNA

• Differentiation causes cells to differ in appearance and function due to variation in gene expression

• Stem cells are not specialized and can become many different cell types

Emergent Properties

Biological systems are much more than the sum of their parts

Structure or form fits function at all levels of biological organization

Electronic information

Player

Music is produced

Analogy: DNA is the genetic material of all living cells

Genetic information

Cell machinery; Gene expression

Protein is producedVisible feature or trait: color of a

flower

Genetic Material• DNA is organized inside the nucleus• Genes are the units of heredity made of segments of DNA• Linear chromosomes each with many genes• Genome all the DNA present in one cell

Chromatin

Chromosomes chromatin: DNA + Proteins

Autosomes: chromosomes 1-22Sex Chromosomes: X and Y

Karyotype

Reading1.1, Figure 1

DNA

Cell

Nucleotide

A

C

T

A

T

A

C

C

G

G

T

A

T

A

Nucleus

Two types of nucleic acids necessary for directing the activities of the cell

• DNA– One structure or shape …… one function

• RNA– Several shapes…… multiple functions

Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)

• A double-stranded chain of units (deoxyribonucleotides)

• A polymer (made by connecting many)

• Each deoxyribonucleotide- Phosphate- Sugar: Deoxyribose- Bases: Adenine A

Guanine GThymine TCytosine C

Reading 1.1, Figure 2

Gene expression starts with the genetic material, DNA

1. Replicates before cells can divide

2. Directs the synthesis of proteins

The sequence of the bases code for the sequence of the building blocks, amino acids, of a protein

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)

• A single stranded polymer of ribonucleotides• Ribonucleotide components:

- Phosphate- Sugar: Ribose- Base: Adenine A Guanine G

Uracil U Cytosine C

• Exists in several types

• Passes on the information and participates in directing the cells synthesis of proteins

Genetic variations• Form by mutation, changes at the DNA level

• Mutations in sperm or egg cells are passed on to the next generation

• Mutations may be positive, negative, or neutral

• Alleles are variants of genes

- Ascending vs. Descending fashion

- Each level builds on the level below it, leading to new emergent properties

- Biological systems are much more than the sum of their parts (emergence)

Levels of biological organization

Atoms/Elements

Molecules

Organelle

Cell

Tissue

Organ

Organ system

Organism(Family)

Population

Community

Ecosystem

Biosphere

Chemical world

Biological World

Non-living

Living

Ascending

Descending

– Organism: a living individual

– Family: genetically connected Individuals

– Population: a localized group of individual organisms of a species. All alleles in a population is a “gene pool”

– Community: living organisms from different populations living together in one place

– Ecosystem: all living as well as the nonliving environmental components of a place

The human body contains- About 50-100 trillion cells- 4 types of tissues- More than 260 types of cells

Levels of biologic organization

Levels of biologic organization

Tissues are groups of many similar cells that perform the same specific function

Tissue types• Epithelial tissue• Connective• Muscle• Nervous

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tKWTJ3_-1E8(~6 minutes)

Evolutionary Adaptation of populations

– Genetic diversity along with external factors including natural selection lead to differential reproductive success.

– Populations change over long periods of time– Natural selection- Charles Darwin How evolution really workshttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/11/2/e_s_4.html orhttp://www.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.evo.howreally/evolvi

ng-ideas-how-does-evolution-really-work/

1. A basic set of genes is shared by all living organisms

2. Mutations change DNA sequence

3. Mutations take place over time

4. Sequencing of genomes shows their evolutionary relatedness.

5. Closely related organisms have more similar genes.

Genome comparisons among species - The more similar the sequences are, the more recent the divergence from a common ancestor

98% of human DNA sequences are shared with chimpanzees

Humans have genes that are also found in mice, pufferfish, fruit flies, yeast, and even bacteria

Establishing Evolutionary Relationships

Heredity transmission of genetic factors from parents or ancestors to offspring or next generation

Genetics- the field of biology that studies heredity

Definitions

Themes of Genetics (Learning Objectives)

1. The branches of biology concerned with heredity and variation

– Genetic fields of study: Classical (Mendelian patterns of inheritance) Molecular (from DNA to protein and its control)Effect on all levels of biological organization

– Genetic variability and factors affecting variability of gene expression– DNA technologies– Genomics: analysis of genomes and their variation– Genomic technologies

2. Impact of modern genomic and DNA technologies

Change of genetics from an academic science to a clinical science with practical and societal implications for

– Health, Research, Environment– Bioethics is a field of study concerned with issues of privacy, confidentiality, and

discrimination.

Genetic Variability• Single Gene determine Mendelian Traits

– Genotype (genetic composition) leads to a phenotype (trait)

• Multifactorial traits– Influenced by:

• Other genes• Environmental factors: life style, exercise, diet

– Risk prediction: severity of symptoms (variable)– Arise from differences in protein structure, level, place, or

time of expression

Applications of Genetics and its Modern Technologies

• Identity studies (Forensics & Ancestry)• Screening for carriers of single-gene disease• Health Care (Pharmacogenomics)• Redefining Disease (Reflection of gene expression)• Genetic Testing (GINA Act value and limitations)• Agriculture (GM food and transgenic organisms)• Ecology (Metagenomics and the Microbiome project)

Disease as a Reflection of Gene Expression

Current Pharmacogenomic Tests