Chapter 14 Mendel and the
Gene Idea
Lecture Outline
Overview: Drawing from the
Deck of Genes
·
Every
day we observe heritable variations (such as brown, green, or blue eyes) among
individuals in a population.
·
These
traits are transmitted from parents to offspring.
·
One
possible explanation for heredity is a “blending” hypothesis.
°
This
hypothesis proposes that genetic material contributed by each parent mixes in a
manner analogous to the way blue and yellow paints blend to make green.
°
With
blending inheritance, a freely mating population will eventually give rise to a
uniform population of individuals.
°
Everyday
observations and the results of breeding experiments tell us that heritable
traits do not blend to become uniform.
·
An
alternative model, “particulate” inheritance, proposes that parents pass on
discrete heritable units, genes, that retain their separate identities in
offspring.
°
Genes
can be sorted and passed on, generation after generation, in undiluted form.
·
Modern
genetics began in an abbey garden, where a monk named Gregor Mendel documented
a particulate mechanism of inheritance.
Concept 14.1 Mendel used the scientific approach
to identify two laws of inheritance
·
Mendel
discovered the basic principles of heredity by breeding garden peas in
carefully planned experiments.
·
Mendel
grew up on a small farm in what is today the
·
In
1843, Mendel entered an Augustinian monastery.
·
He
studied at the
·
These
influences came together in Mendel’s experiments.
·
After
university, Mendel taught at the
·
The
monks at this monastery had a long tradition of interest in the breeding of
plants, including peas.
·
Around
1857, Mendel began breeding garden peas to study inheritance.
·
Pea
plants have several advantages for genetic study.
°
Pea
plants are available in many varieties with distinct heritable features, or characters, with different variant traits.
°
Mendel
could strictly control which plants mated with which.
°
Each
pea plant has male (stamens) and female (carpal) sexual organs.
°
In
nature, pea plants typically self-fertilize, fertilizing ova with the sperm
nuclei from their own pollen.
°
However,
Mendel could also use pollen from another plant for cross-pollination.
·
Mendel
tracked only those characters that varied in an “either-or” manner, rather than
a “more-or-less” manner.
°
For
example, he worked with flowers that were either purple or white.
°
He
avoided traits, such as seed weight, that varied on a continuum.
·
Mendel
started his experiments with varieties that were true-breeding.
°
When
true-breeding plants self-pollinate, all their offspring have the same traits.
·
In
a typical breeding experiment, Mendel would cross-pollinate (hybridize) two contrasting,
true-breeding pea varieties.
°
The
true-breeding parents are the P
generation, and their hybrid offspring are the F1 generation.
·
Mendel
would then allow the F1 hybrids to self-pollinate to produce an F2 generation.
·
It
was mainly Mendel’s quantitative analysis of F2 plants that revealed
two fundamental principles of heredity: the law of segregation and the law of
independent assortment.
By the law of segregation, the two alleles for
a character are separated during the formation of gametes.
·
If
the blending model was correct, the F1 hybrids from a cross between
purple-flowered and white-flowered pea plants would have pale purple flowers.
·
Instead,
F1 hybrids all have purple flowers, just as purple as their
purple-flowered parents.
·
When
Mendel allowed the F1 plants to self-fertilize, the F2
generation included both purple-flowered and white-flowered plants.
°
The
white trait, absent in the F1, reappeared in the F2.
·
Mendel
used very large sample sizes and kept accurate records of his results.
°
Mendel
recorded 705 purple-flowered F2 plants and 224 white-flowered F2
plants.
°
This
cross produced a traits ratio of three purple to one white in the F2
offspring.
·
Mendel
reasoned that the heritable factor for white flowers was present in the F1
plants, but did not affect flower color.
°
Purple
flower color is a dominant trait, and
white flower color is a recessive
trait.
·
The
reappearance of white-flowered plants in the F2 generation indicated
that the heritable factor for the white trait was not diluted or “blended” by
coexisting with the purple-flower factor in F1 hybrids.
·
Mendel
found similar 3-to-1 ratios of two traits among F2 offspring when he
conducted crosses for six other characters, each represented by two different
traits.
·
For
example, when Mendel crossed two true-breeding varieties, one producing round
seeds and the other producing wrinkled seeds, all the F1 offspring
had round seeds.
°
In
the F2 plants, 75% of the seeds were round and 25% were wrinkled.
·
Mendel
developed a hypothesis to explain these results that consisted of four related
ideas. We will explain each idea with the modern understanding of genes and
chromosomes.
1. Alternative versions of genes account for variations in
inherited characters.
°
The
gene for flower color in pea plants exists in two versions, one for purple
flowers and one for white flowers.
°
These
alternate versions are called alleles.
°
Each
gene resides at a specific locus on a specific chromosome.
°
The
DNA at that locus can vary in its sequence of nucleotides.
°
The
purple-flower and white-flower alleles are two DNA variations at the
flower-color locus.
2. For each character, an organism inherits two alleles, one from
each parent.
°
A
diploid organism inherits one set of chromosomes from each parent.
°
Each diploid organism has a pair of homologous
chromosomes and, therefore, two copies of each gene.
°
These
homologous loci may be identical, as in the true-breeding plants of the P
generation.
°
Alternatively,
the two alleles may differ.
3. If the two alleles at a locus differ, then one, the dominant
allele, determines the organism’s appearance. The other, the recessive allele,
has no noticeable effect on the organism’s appearance.
°
In
the flower-color example, the F1 plants inherited a purple-flower
allele from one parent and a white-flower allele from the other.
°
They
had purple flowers because the allele for that trait is dominant.
4. 4. Mendel’s law of segregation states that the two
alleles for a heritable character separate and segregate during gamete
production and end up in different gametes.
°
This
segregation of alleles corresponds to the distribution of homologous
chromosomes to different gametes in meiosis.
°
If
an organism has two identical alleles for a particular character, then that
allele is present as a single copy in all gametes.
°
If
different alleles are present, then 50% of the gametes will receive one allele
and 50% will receive the other.
·
Mendel’s
law of segregation accounts for the 3:1 ratio that he observed in the F2
generation.
·
The
F1 hybrids produce two classes of gametes, half with the
purple-flower allele and half with the white-flower allele.
·
During
self-pollination, the gametes of these two classes unite randomly.
·
This
produces four equally likely combinations of sperm and ovum.
·
A
Punnett square predicts the results
of a genetic cross between individuals of known genotype.
·
Let
us describe a Punnett square analysis of the flower-color example.
·
We
will use a capital letter to symbolize the dominant allele and a lowercase
letter to symbolize the recessive allele.
°
P is the purple-flower
allele, and p is the white-flower
allele.
·
What
will be the physical appearance of the F2 offspring?
°
One
in four F2 offspring will inherit two white-flower alleles and
produce white flowers.
°
Half
of the F2 offspring will inherit one white-flower allele and one
purple-flower allele and produce purple flowers.
°
One
in four F2 offspring will inherit two purple-flower alleles and
produce purple flowers.
·
Mendel’s
model accounts for the 3:1 ratio in the F2 generation.
·
An
organism with two identical alleles for a character is homozygous for that character.
·
Organisms
with two different alleles for a character is heterozygous for that character.
·
An
organism’s traits are called its phenotype.
·
Its
genetic makeup is called its genotype.
°
Two
organisms can have the same phenotype but have different genotypes if one is
homozygous dominant and the other is heterozygous.
·
For
flower color in peas, the only individuals with white flowers are those that
are homozygous recessive (pp) for the
flower-color gene.
·
However,
PP and Pp plants have the same phenotype (purple flowers) but different
genotypes (homozygous dominant and heterozygous).
·
How
can we tell the genotype of an individual with the dominant phenotype?
°
The
organism must have one dominant allele, but could be homozygous dominant or
heterozygous.
·
The
answer is to carry out a testcross.
°
The
mystery individual is bred with a homozygous recessive individual.
°
If
any of the offspring display the recessive phenotype, the mystery parent must
be heterozygous.
By the law of independent assortment, each
pair of alleles segregates independently into gametes.
·
Mendel’s
first experiments followed only a single
character, such as flower color.
°
All
F1 progeny produced in these crosses were monohybrids, heterozygous for one character.
°
A
cross between two heterozygotes is a monohybrid
cross.
·
Mendel
identified the second law of inheritance by following two characters at the same time.
·
In
one such dihybrid cross, Mendel
studied the inheritance of seed color and seed shape.
°
The
allele for yellow seeds (Y) is
dominant to the allele for green seeds (y).
°
The
allele for round seeds (R) is
dominant to the allele for wrinkled seeds (r).
·
Mendel
crossed true-breeding plants that had yellow, round seeds (YYRR) with true-breeding plants that has green, wrinkled seeds (yyrr).
·
One
possibility is that the two characters are transmitted from parents to offspring
as a package.
°
The
Y and R alleles and y and r alleles stay together.
·
If
this were the case, the F1 offspring would produce yellow, round
seeds.
·
The
F2 offspring would produce two phenotypes (yellow + round; green +
wrinkled) in a 3:1 ratio, just like a monohybrid cross.
°
This
was not consistent with Mendel’s results.
·
An
alternative hypothesis is that the two pairs of alleles segregate independently
of each other.
°
The
presence of a specific allele for one trait in a gamete has no impact on the
presence of a specific allele for the second trait.
·
In
our example, the F1 offspring would still produce yellow, round
seeds.
·
However,
when the F1s produced gametes, genes would be packaged into gametes
with all possible allelic combinations.
°
Four
classes of gametes (YR, Yr, yR,
and yr) would be produced in equal
amounts.
·
When
sperm with four classes of alleles and ova with four classes of alleles
combined, there would be 16 equally probable ways in which the alleles can
combine in the F2 generation.
·
These
combinations produce four distinct phenotypes in a 9:3:3:1 ratio.
·
This
was consistent with Mendel’s results.
·
Mendel
repeated the dihybrid cross experiment for other pairs of characters and always
observed a 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio in the F2 generation.
·
Each
character appeared to be inherited independently.
·
If
you follow just one character in these crosses, you will observe a 3:1 F2
ratio, just as if this were a monohybrid cross.
·
The
independent assortment of each pair of alleles during gamete formation is now
called Mendel’s law of independent
assortment.
·
Mendel’s
law of independent assortment states that each
pair of alleles segregates independently during gamete formation.
·
Strictly
speaking, this law applies only to genes located on different, nonhomologous
chromosomes.
·
Genes
located near each other on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together
and have more complex inheritance patterns than those predicted for the law of
independent assortment.
Concept 14.2 The laws of probability govern
Mendelian inheritance
·
Mendel’s
laws of segregation and independent assortment reflect the same laws of
probability that apply to tossing coins or rolling dice.
·
The
probability scale ranges from 0 (an event with no chance of occurring) to 1 (an
event that is certain to occur).
°
The
probability of tossing heads with a normal coin is 1/2.
°
The
probability of rolling a 3 with a six-sided die is 1/6, and the probability of
rolling any other number is 1 − 1/6 = 5/6.
·
When
tossing a coin, the outcome of one toss has no impact on the outcome of the
next toss.
·
Each
toss is an independent event, just like the distribution of alleles into
gametes.
°
Like
a coin toss, each ovum from a heterozygous parent has a 1/2 chance of carrying
the dominant allele and a 1/2 chance of carrying the recessive allele.
°
The
same odds apply to the sperm.
·
We
can use the multiplication rule to
determine the chance that two or more independent events will occur together in
some specific combination.
°
Compute
the probability of each independent event.
°
Multiply
the individual probabilities to obtain the overall probability of these events
occurring together.
°
The
probability that two coins tossed at the same time will land heads up is 1/2 ×
1/2 = 1/4.
°
Similarly,
the probability that a heterozygous pea plant (Pp) will self-fertilize to produce a white-flowered offspring (pp) is the chance that a sperm with a
white allele will fertilize an ovum with a white allele.
°
This
probability is 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/4.
·
The
rule of multiplication also applies to dihybrid crosses.
°
For
a heterozygous parent (YyRr) the
probability of producing a YR gamete
is 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/4.
°
We
can use this to predict the probability of a particular F2 genotype
without constructing a 16-part Punnett square.
°
The
probability that an F2 plant from heterozygous parents will have a YYRR genotype is 1/16 (1/4 chance for a YR ovum and 1/4 chance for a YR sperm).
·
The
rule of addition also applies to genetic problems.
·
Under
the rule of addition, the probability
of an event that can occur two or more different ways is the sum of the
separate probabilities of those ways.
°
For
example, there are two ways that F1 gametes can combine to form a
heterozygote.
§
The
dominant allele could come from the sperm and the recessive from the ovum
(probability = 1/4).
§
Or
the dominant allele could come from the ovum and the recessive from the sperm
(probability = 1/4).
§
The
probability of obtaining a heterozygote is 1/4 + 1/4 = 1/2.
·
We
can combine the rules of multiplication and addition to solve complex problems
in Mendelian genetics.
·
Let’s
determine the probability of an offspring having two recessive phenotypes for
at least two of three traits resulting from a trihybrid cross between pea
plants that are PpYyRr and Ppyyrr.
°
There
are five possible genotypes that fulfill this condition: ppyyRr, ppYyrr, Ppyyrr, PPyyrr, and ppyyrr.
°
We
can use the rule of multiplication to calculate the probability for each of
these genotypes and then use the rule of addition to pool the probabilities for
fulfilling the condition of at least two recessive traits.
·
The
probability of producing a ppyyRr
offspring:
°
The
probability of producing pp = 1/2 ×
1/2 = 1/4.
°
The
probability of producing yy = 1/2 × 1
= 1/2.
°
The
probability of producing Rr = 1/2 × 1
= 1/2.
°
Therefore,
the probability of all three being present (ppyyRr)
in one offspring is 1/4 × 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/16.
·
For ppYyrr: 1/4 × 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/16.
·
For
Ppyyrr: 1/2 × 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/8 or
2/16.
·
For PPyyrr: 1/4 × 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/16.
·
For ppyyrr: 1/4 × 1/2 × 1/2 = 1/16.
·
Therefore,
the chance that a given offspring will have at least two recessive traits is
1/16 + 2/16 + 1/16 + 1/16 = 6/16.
Mendel discovered the particulate behavior of
genes: a review.
·
While
we cannot predict with certainty the genotype or phenotype of any particular
seed from the F2 generation of a dihybrid cross, we can predict the
probability that it will have a specific genotype or phenotype.
·
Mendel’s
experiments succeeded because he counted so many offspring, was able to discern
the statistical nature of inheritance, and had a keen sense of the rules of
chance.
·
Mendel’s
laws of independent assortment and segregation explain heritable variation in
terms of alternative forms of genes that are passed along according to simple
rules of probability.
·
These
laws apply not just to garden peas, but to all diploid organisms that reproduce
by sexual reproduction.
·
Mendel’s
studies of pea inheritance endure not only in genetics, but as a case study of
the power of scientific reasoning using the hypothetico-deductive approach.
Concept 14.3 Inheritance patterns are often more complex
than predicted by simple Mendelian genetics
·
In
the 20th century, geneticists have extended Mendelian principles not only to
diverse organisms, but also to patterns of inheritance more complex than Mendel
described.
·
In
fact, Mendel had the good fortune to choose a system that was relatively simple
genetically.
°
Each
character that Mendel studied is controlled by a single gene.
°
Each
gene has only two alleles, one of which is completely dominant to the other.
·
The
heterozygous F1 offspring of Mendel’s crosses always looked like one
of the parental varieties because one allele was dominant to the other.
·
The
relationship between genotype and phenotype is rarely so simple.
·
The
inheritance of characters determined by a single gene deviates from simple
Mendelian patterns when alleles are not completely dominant or recessive, when
a gene has more than two alleles, or when a gene produces multiple phenotypes.
·
We
will consider examples of each of these situations.
·
Alleles
show different degrees of dominance and recessiveness in relation to each
other.
·
One
extreme is the complete dominance
characteristic of Mendel’s crosses.
·
At
the other extreme from complete dominance is codominance, in which two alleles affect the phenotype in separate,
distinguishable ways.
°
For
example, the M, N, and MN blood groups of humans are due to the presence of two
specific molecules on the surface of red blood cells.
°
People
of group M (genotype MM) have one type of molecule on their red blood cells,
people of group N (genotype NN) have the other type, and people of group MN
(genotype MN) have both molecules present.
°
The
MN phenotype is not intermediate between M and N phenotypes but rather exhibits
both the M and the N phenotype.
·
Some
alleles show incomplete dominance,
in which heterozygotes show a distinct intermediate phenotype not seen in
homozygotes.
°
This
is not blending inheritance because the traits are separable (particulate), as
shown in further crosses.
°
Offspring
of a cross between heterozygotes show three phenotypes: each parental and the
heterozygote.
°
The
phenotypic and genotypic ratios are identical: 1:2:1.
·
A
clear example of incomplete dominance is seen in flower color of snapdragons.
°
A
cross between a white-flowered plant and a red-flowered plant will produce all
pink F1 offspring.
°
Self-pollination
of the F1 offspring produces 25% white, 25% red, and 50% pink F2
offspring.
·
The
relative effects of two alleles range from complete dominance of one allele,
through incomplete dominance of either allele, to codominance of both alleles.
·
It
is important to recognize that a dominant
allele does not somehow subdue a recessive allele.
·
Alleles
are simply variations in a gene’s nucleotide sequence.
°
When
a dominant allele coexists with a recessive allele in a heterozygote, they do
not interact at all.
·
To
illustrate the relationship between dominance and phenotype, let us consider
Mendel’s character of round versus wrinkled pea seed shape.
°
Pea
plants with wrinkled seeds have two copies of the recessive allele.
°
The
seeds are wrinkled due to the accumulation of monosaccharides because of the
lack of a key enzyme that converts them to starch.
°
Excess
water enters the seed due to the accumulation of monosaccharides.
§
The
seeds wrinkle when the excess water dries.
°
Both
homozygous dominants and heterozygotes produce enough enzymes to convert all
the monosaccharides into starch.
°
As
a result, they do not fill with excess water and form smooth seeds as they dry.
·
For
any character, dominance/recessiveness relationships depend on the level at
which we examine the phenotype.
°
For
example, humans with Tay-Sachs disease
lack a functioning enzyme to metabolize certain lipids. These lipids accumulate
in the brain, harming brain cells, and ultimately leading to death.
°
Children
with two Tay-Sachs alleles (homozygotes) have the disease.
°
Both
heterozygotes with one working allele and homozygotes with two working alleles
are healthy and normal at the organismal
level.
°
The
activity level of the lipid-metabolizing enzyme is reduced in heterozygotes. At
the biochemical level, the alleles
show incomplete dominance.
°
Heterozygous
individuals produce equal numbers of normal and dysfunctional enzyme molecules.
At the molecular level, the Tay-Sachs
and functional alleles are codominant.
·
A
dominant allele is not necessarily more common in a population than the
recessive allele.
°
For
example, one baby in 400 is born with polydactyly, a condition in which
individuals are born with extra fingers or toes.
°
Polydactyly
is due to a dominant allele.
°
However,
the recessive allele is far more prevalent than the dominant allele.
§
399
individuals out of 400 have five digits per appendage.
·
Many
genes exist in populations in more than two allelic forms.
·
The
ABO blood groups in humans are determined by three alleles, IA, IB, and i.
°
Both
the IA and IB alleles are dominant to
the i allele.
°
The
IA and IB alleles are codominant to
each other.
·
Because
each individual carries two alleles, there are six possible genotypes and four
possible blood types.
°
Individuals
that are IAIA
or IAi are type A and have
type A carbohydrates on the surface of their red blood cells.
°
Individuals
that are IBIB
or IBi are type B and have
type B carbohydrates on the surface of their red blood cells.
°
Individuals
that are IAIB
are type AB and have both type A and type B carbohydrates on the surface of
their red blood cells.
°
Individuals
that are ii are type O and have
neither carbohydrate on the surface of their red blood cells.
·
Matching
compatible blood groups is critical for blood transfusions because a person
produces antibodies against foreign blood factors.
°
If
the donor’s blood has an A or B carbohydrate that is foreign to the recipient,
antibodies in the recipient’s blood will bind to the foreign molecules, cause
the donated blood cells to clump together, and can kill the recipient.
·
The
genes that we have covered so far affect only one phenotypic character.
·
However,
most genes are pleiotropic,
affecting more than one phenotypic character.
°
For
example, the wide-ranging symptoms of sickle-cell disease are due to a single
gene.
·
Considering
the intricate molecular and cellular interactions responsible for an organism’s
development, it is not surprising that a gene can affect a number of
characteristics.
·
In
epistasis, a gene at one locus
alters the phenotypic expression of a gene at a second locus.
°
For
example, in mice and many other mammals, coat color depends on two genes.
°
One,
the epistatic gene, determines whether pigment will be deposited in hair or
not.
§
Presence
(C) is dominant to absence (c) of pigment.
°
The
second gene determines whether the pigment to be deposited is black (B) or brown (b).
§
The
black allele is dominant to the brown allele.
°
An
individual that is cc has a white
(albino) coat regardless of the genotype of the second gene.
·
A
cross between two black mice that are heterozygous (BbCc) will follow the law of independent assortment.
·
However,
unlike the 9:3:3:1 offspring ratio of a normal Mendelian experiment, the
offspring ratio is nine black, three brown, and four white.
·
All
cc mice will be albino, regardless of
the alleles they inherit at the B gene.
·
Some
characters cannot be classified as either-or, as Mendel’s genes were.
·
Quantitative characters vary in a population
along a continuum.
·
These
are usually due to polygenic
inheritance, the additive effects of two or more genes on a single
phenotypic character.
°
For
example, skin color in humans is controlled by at least three independent
genes.
°
Imagine
that each gene has two alleles, one light and one dark, which demonstrate
incomplete dominance.
°
An
AABBCC individual is very dark; an aabbcc individual is very light.
·
A
cross between two AaBbCc individuals
(with intermediate skin shade) will produce offspring covering a wide range of
shades.
°
Individuals
with intermediate skin shades will be most common, but some very light and very
dark individuals could be produced as well.
°
The
range of phenotypes will form a normal distribution, if the number of offspring
is great enough.
·
Phenotype
depends on environment and genes.
°
A
person becomes darker if they tan, despite their inherited skin color.
°
A
single tree may have leaves that vary in size, shape, and greenness, depending
on exposure to wind and sun.
°
For
humans, nutrition influences height, exercise alters build, sun-tanning darkens
skin, and experience improves performance on intelligence tests.
°
Even
identical twins, who are genetically identical, accumulate phenotypic
differences as a result of their unique experiences.
·
The
relative importance of genes and the environment in influencing human
characteristics is a very old and hotly contested debate.
·
The
product of a genotype is generally not a rigidly defined phenotype, but a range
of phenotypic possibilities, the norm of
reaction, that are determined by the environment.
°
In
some cases, the norm of reaction has no breadth, and a given genotype specifies
a particular phenotype (for example, blood type).
°
In
contrast, a person’s red and white blood cell count varies with factors such as
altitude, customary exercise level, and presence of infection.
·
Norms
of reaction are broadest for polygenic characters.
°
For
these multifactorial characters,
environment contributes to their quantitative nature.
·
A
reductionist emphasis on single genes and single phenotypic characters presents
an inadequate perspective on heredity and variation.
·
A
more comprehensive theory of Mendelian genetics must view organisms as a whole.
·
The
term phenotype can refer not only to
specific characters such as flower color or blood group, but also to an
organism in its entirety, including all aspects of its physical appearance.
·
Genotype can refer not just to a
single genetic locus, but also to an organism’s entire genetic makeup.
·
An
organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and its unique environmental
history.
Concept 14.4 Many human traits follow Mendelian patterns of inheritance
·
While
peas are convenient subjects for genetic research, humans are not.
°
The
generation time is too long, fecundity is too low, and breeding experiments are
unacceptable.
·
Yet
humans are subject to the same rules governing inheritance as other organisms.
·
New
techniques in molecular biology have led to many breakthrough discoveries in
the study of human genetics.
Pedigree analysis reveals Mendelian patterns
in human inheritance.
·
Rather
than manipulate mating patterns of people, geneticists analyze the results of
matings that have already occurred.
·
In
a pedigree analysis, information
about the presence or absence of a particular phenotypic trait is collected
from as many individuals in a family as possible, across generations.
·
The
distribution of these characters is then mapped on the family tree.
°
For
example, the occurrence of widow’s peak (W)
is dominant to a straight hairline (w).
°
Phenotypes
of family members and knowledge of dominant/recessive relations between alleles
allow researchers to predict the genotypes of members of this family.
°
For
example, if an individual in the third generation lacks a widow’s peak, but
both her parents have widow’s peaks, then her parents must be heterozygous for
that gene.
°
If
some siblings in the second generation lack a widow’s peak and one of the
grandparents (first generation) also lacks one, then we know the other
grandparent must be heterozygous, and we can determine the genotype of many
other individuals.
·
We
can use the same family tree to trace the distribution of attached earlobes (f), a recessive characteristic.
·
Individuals
with a dominant allele (F) have free
earlobes.
·
Some
individuals may be ambiguous, especially if they have the dominant phenotype
and could be heterozygous or homozygous dominant.
·
A
pedigree can help us understand the past and predict the future.
·
We
can use normal Mendelian rules, including multiplication and addition, to
predict the probability of specific phenotypes.
°
For
example, these rules could be used to predict the probability that a child with
WwFf parents will have a widow’s peak
and attached earlobes.
§
The
chance of having a widow’s peak is 3/4 (1/2 [WW] + 1/4 [Ww]).
§
The
chance of having attached earlobes is 1/4 [ff].
§
This
combination has a probability of 3/4 × 1/4 = 3/16.
Many human disorders follow Mendelian patterns
of inheritance.
·
Thousands
of genetic disorders, including disabling or deadly hereditary diseases, are
inherited as simple recessive traits.
°
These
conditions range from relatively mild (albinism) to life-threatening (cystic
fibrosis).
·
The
recessive behavior of the alleles causing these conditions occurs because the
allele codes for a malfunctioning protein or for no protein at all.
°
Heterozygotes
have a normal phenotype because one normal allele produces enough of the required
protein.
·
A
recessively inherited disorder shows up only in homozygous individuals who
inherit a recessive allele from each parent.
·
Individuals
who lack the disorder are either homozygous dominant or heterozygotes.
·
While
heterozygotes may lack obvious phenotypic effects, they are carriers who may transmit a recessive
allele to their offspring.
·
Most
people with recessive disorders are born to carriers with normal phenotypes.
°
Two
carriers have a 1/4 chance of having a child with the disorder, 1/2 chance of
having a child who is a carrier, and 1/4 chance of having a child without a
defective allele.
·
Genetic
disorders are not evenly distributed among all groups of humans.
·
This
results from the different genetic histories of the world’s people during times
when populations were more geographically and genetically isolated.
·
Cystic fibrosis strikes one of every
2,500 whites of European descent.
°
One
in 25 people of European descent is a carrier for this condition.
°
The
normal allele for this gene codes for a membrane protein that transports Cl−
between cells and extracellular fluid.
°
If
these channels are defective or absent, there are abnormally high extracellular
levels of chloride.
°
This
causes the mucus coats of certain cells to become thicker and stickier than normal.
°
This
mucus buildup in the pancreas, lungs, digestive tract, and elsewhere causes
poor absorption of nutrients, chronic bronchitis, and bacterial infections.
°
Without
treatment, affected children die before five, but with treatment, they can live
past their late 20s or even 30s.
·
Tay-Sachs disease is another lethal
recessive disorder.
°
It
is caused by a dysfunctional enzyme that fails to break down specific brain
lipids.
°
The
symptoms begin with seizures, blindness, and degeneration of motor and mental performance
a few months after birth.
°
Inevitably,
the child dies after a few years.
°
Among
Ashkenazic Jews (those from central Europe), this disease occurs in one of
3,600 births, about 100 times greater than the incidence among non-Jews or
·
The
most common inherited disease among people of African descent is sickle-cell disease, which affects one of 400 African-Americans.
°
Sickle-cell
disease is caused by the substitution of a single amino acid in hemoglobin.
°
When
oxygen levels in the blood of an affected individual are low, sickle-cell
hemoglobin aggregate into long rods that deform red blood cells into a sickle
shape.
°
This
sickling creates a cascade of symptoms, demonstrating the pleiotropic effects
of this allele, as sickled cells clump and clog capillaries throughout the
body.
·
Doctors
can use regular blood transfusions to prevent brain damage and new drugs to
prevent or treat other problems.
·
At
the organismal level, the nonsickle allele is incompletely dominant to the
sickle-cell allele.
°
Carriers
are said to have sickle-cell trait.
°
These
individuals are usually healthy, although some suffer some symptoms of
sickle-cell disease under blood oxygen stress.
·
At
the molecular level, the two alleles are codominant as both normal and abnormal
(sickle-cell) hemoglobins are synthesized.
·
About
one in ten African-Americans has sickle-cell trait.
°
The
high frequency of heterozygotes is unusual for an allele with severe
detrimental effects in homozygotes.
°
Individuals
with one sickle-cell allele have increased resistance to malaria, a parasite
that spends part of its life cycle in red blood cells.
°
In
tropical
§
Homozygous
normal individuals die of malaria and homozygous recessive individuals die of
sickle-cell disease, while carriers are relatively free of both.
·
The
relatively high frequency of sickle-cell trait in African-Americans is a
vestige of their African roots.
·
Normally
it is relatively unlikely that two carriers of the same rare, harmful allele
will meet and mate.
·
However,
consanguineous matings between close relatives increase the risk.
°
Individuals
who share a recent common ancestor are more likely to carry the same recessive
alleles.
·
Most
societies and cultures have laws or taboos forbidding marriages between close
relatives.
·
Although
most harmful alleles are recessive, a number of human disorders are due to
dominant alleles.
·
For
example, achondroplasia, a form of
dwarfism, has an incidence of one case in 25,000 people.
°
Heterozygous
individuals have the dwarf phenotype.
°
Those
who are not achondroplastic dwarfs, 99.99% of the population, are homozygous
recessive for this trait.
°
This
provides another example of a trait for which the recessive allele is far more
prevalent than the dominant allele.
·
Lethal
dominant alleles are much less common than lethal recessives.
°
If
a lethal dominant kills an offspring before it can mature and reproduce, the
allele will not be passed on to future generations.
°
In
contrast, a lethal recessive allele can be passed on by heterozygous carriers
who have normal phenotypes.
·
A
lethal dominant allele can escape elimination if it causes death at a
relatively advanced age, after the individual has already passed on the lethal
allele to his or her children.
·
One
example is Huntington’s disease, a
degenerative disease of the nervous system.
°
The
dominant lethal allele has no obvious phenotypic effect until an individual is
about 35 to 45 years old.
°
The
deterioration of the nervous system is irreversible and inevitably fatal.
·
Any
child born to a parent who has the allele for Huntington’s disease has a 50%
chance of inheriting the disease and the disorder.
·
In
the
·
Recently,
molecular geneticists have used pedigree analysis of affected families to track
the
°
This
has led to the development of a test that can detect the presence of the
·
While
some diseases are inherited in a simple Mendelian fashion due to alleles at a
single locus, many other disorders have a multifactorial basis.
°
These
may have a genetic component plus a significant environmental influence.
°
Multifactorial
disorders include heart disease; diabetes; cancer; alcoholism; and certain
mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia and manic-depressive disorder.
°
The
genetic component of such disorders is typically polygenic.
·
At
present, little is understood about the genetic contribution to most
multifactorial diseases.
°
The best public health strategy is education
about relevant environmental factors and promotion of healthy behavior.
Technology is providing new tools for genetic
testing and counseling.
·
A
preventive approach to simple Mendelian disorders is sometimes possible.
·
The
risk that a particular genetic disorder will occur can sometimes be assessed
before a child is conceived or early in pregnancy.
·
Many
hospitals have genetic counselors to provide information to prospective parents
who are concerned about a family history of a specific disease.
·
Consider
a hypothetical couple, John and Carol, who are planning to have their first
child.
·
In
both of their families’ histories, a recessive lethal disorder is present. Both
John and Carol had brothers who died of the disease.
°
While
not one of John, Carol, or their parents have the disease, their parents must
have been carriers (Aa × Aa).
°
John
and Carol each have a 2/3 chance of being carriers and a 1/3 chance of being
homozygous dominant.
°
The
probability that their first child will have the disease is 2/3 (chance that
John is a carrier) × 2/3 (chance that Carol is a carrier) × 1/4 (chance that
the offspring of two carriers is homozygous recessive) = 1/9.
°
If
their first child is born with the disease, we know that John and Carol’s
genotype must be Aa and they are both
carriers.
°
In
that case, the chance that their next child will also have the disease is 1/4.
·
Mendel’s
laws are simply the rules of probability applied to heredity.
°
Because
chance has no memory, the genotype of each child is unaffected by the genotypes
of older siblings.
°
The
chance that John and Carol’s first three children will have the disorder is 1/4
× 1/4 × 1/4 = 1/64. Should that outcome happen, the likelihood that a fourth
child will also have the disorder is still 1/4.
·
Because
most children with recessive disorders are born to parents with a normal
phenotype, the key to assessing risk is identifying whether prospective parents
are carriers of the recessive trait.
·
Recently
developed tests for several disorders can distinguish normal phenotypes in
heterozygotes from homozygous dominants.
°
These
results allow individuals with a family history of a genetic disorder to make
informed decisions about having children.
°
However,
issues of confidentiality, discrimination, and counseling may arise.
·
Tests
are also available to determine in utero
if a child has a particular disorder.
·
One
technique, amniocentesis, can be
used from the 14th to 16th week of pregnancy to assess whether the fetus has a
specific disease.
°
Fetal
cells extracted from amniotic fluid are cultured and karyotyped to identify
some disorders.
°
Other
disorders can be identified from chemicals in the amniotic fluids.
·
A
second technique, chorionic villus
sampling (CVS) allows faster karyotyping and can be performed as early as
the eighth to tenth week of pregnancy.
°
This
technique extracts a sample of fetal tissue from the chorionic villi of the
placenta.
°
This
technique is not suitable for tests requiring amniotic fluid.
·
Other
techniques, ultrasound and fetoscopy, allow fetal health to be
assessed visually in utero.
°
Both
fetoscopy and amniocentesis cause complications such as maternal bleeding or
fetal death in about 1% of cases.
°
Therefore,
these techniques are usually reserved for cases in which the risk of a genetic
disorder or other type of birth defect is relatively great.
·
If
fetal tests reveal a serious disorder, the parents face the difficult choice of
terminating the pregnancy or preparing to care for a child with a genetic
disorder.
·
Some
genetic traits can be detected at birth by simple tests that are now routinely
performed in hospitals.
·
One
test can detect the presence of a recessively inherited disorder,
phenylketonuria (PKU).
°
This
disorder occurs in one in 10,000 to 15,000 births.
°
Individuals
with this disorder accumulate the amino acid phenylalanine and its derivative
phenylpyruvate in the blood to toxic levels.
§
This
leads to mental retardation.
°
If
the disorder is detected, a special diet low in phenylalanine usually promotes
normal development.
°
Unfortunately,
few other genetic diseases are so treatable.