Title: Anatomy
1Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective One
2The Characteristics and Functions of Meiosis
Production of gametes
Assures correct chromosome numbers in offspring
Creates new combinations of genes
Begins with a diploid sex cell ends with
non-identical haploid gametes
3Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Two
4 Meiosis
Meiosis is the cell division process by which
gametes are produced
It occurs only in sex cells that are found in the
gonads
5 Meiosis
The process goes through two meiotic divisions
meiosis I and meiosis II
6- A. What Is a Chromosome? A long, continuous
strand of DNA, plus several types of associated
proteins, and RNA.
- Heterochromatin DNA is tightly wound and composed
of many repetitive sequences. - Euchromatin DNA is more loosely wound is
composed of many unique sequences. It encodes
proteins.
7 Meiosis
Homologous chromosomes pairs of similar
chromosomes
8Homologous Chromosomes Cont.
- In humans there are normally 23 pairs of
homologous chromosomes - Therefore, there are 46 diploid chromosomes in a
normal human
9 Meiosis
10 Meiosis
11 Meiosis
12Meiosis vs. Mitosis
13Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Three
14Genetics
Genetics the study of heredity
Heredity the passing of traits from one
generation to the next
Trait a physical or physiological
characteristic coded for by a gene
Gene a portion of a chromosome that codes for a
particular protein
Allele a form of a gene
15Genetics
Dominant allele an allele that masks the
effects of the other
Recessive allele an allele that can be masked
by a dominant allele
Locus the position of a gene on a chromosome
Codominance the two alleles at a locus are
equally expressed
16- Homologous chromosomes a pair of chromosomes,
one each from the female male parent, that have
identical structure and gene loci
Genetics
Mom (female)
Dad (male)
Dominant allele
Recessive allele
Homologous chromosomes
17Genetics
Genotype the set of genes an organism has
Homozygous alleles are the same type
Heterozygous alleles are different
18Genetics
Phenotype the expression of the genotype
Purebred having a homozygous genotype
Hybrid having a heterozygous genotype
19Karyotype is a chart of the chromosomes in a cell
or an organism arranged by size and centromere
position.
20Centromere Positions
- A. Telocentric centromere is located at tip.
- B. Acrocentric centromere is near one end.
- C. Submetacentric centromere divides chromosome
into a long and short arm. - D. Metacentric centromere is centrally
located divides chromosome into two arms of
approximately equal length.
21Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Four
22D
D
d
d
D
d
23D D
Dd Dd
Dd Dd
d d
Punnett Square
24D
D
d
d
d
D
D
D
D
d
d
d
25D d
DD Dd
Dd dd
D d
Complete Dominance
Monohybrid Cross
Genotypic Ratio 121
Phenotypic Ratio 31
26Complete Dominance
27D d
Dd dd
Dd dd
d d
Complete Dominance
Monohybrid Cross
Genotypic Ratio 22
Phenotypic Ratio 22
28A O
AB BO
AO OO
B O
Codominance
Genotypic Ratio 1111
Phenotypic Ratio 1111
29Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Five
30Autosomal vs. Sex Linked
Autosomes all chromosomes except for the ones
that determine sex
Sex chromosomes chromosomes that determine sex
Sex linked traits traits controlled by genes on
the sex chromosomes
31- X-Y System (presence of Y chromosome determines
sex)
female is XX male is XY Ex. all mammals
SRY gene
32In X-Y system, male determines sex of offspring
(half his sperm contain X chromosome, while other
half contains Y chromosome)
33- Inheritance of Genes on Sex Chromosomes
- X-Linked traits are carried on the X
chromosome and most are recessive - Examples color blindness, hemophilia (disease
where afflicted individuals lack a protein
clotting factor that is essential in blood
clotting) -
- More common in females
- affected males are hemizygous (have only 1 set of
X chromosomes, so they either have the trait or
not), cannot be carriers - Male inherits X-linked condition from carrier
or affected mother - Y-linked traits are very rare because Y has
few genes
34(No Transcript)
35XB Xb
XBXb XbXb
XBY XbY
Xb Y
Sex Linked Cross
36- Hemophilia recessive X-linked trait
- Genotype Phenotype
- XHXH non-carrier female
- XHXh carrier female
- XhXh female with hemophilia
- XHY normal male
- XhY male with hemophilia
37What is the probability that a carrier female and
a normal male will have a son with hemophilia?
¼ or 25
38- Pedigree of several royal families with
hemophilia. The mutant allele apparently arose
in Queen Victoria, who was either a carrier or
produced an oocyte that mutated to carry the
allele.
39Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Six
40Human Sex Chromosomes
?
?
X
Y
X
X
41Human Sex Chromosomes
?
?
42(No Transcript)
43Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Seven
44Genes, Genetic Code Genetic Disease
Remember, genes are portions of DNA that code for
a particular protein
In order for the protein to be functional, the
DNA nitrogen base sequence must be correct
45Genes, Genetic Code Genetic Disease
Any variance of that sequence can cause the wrong
amino acid to be inserted into the polypeptide
which could result in - a non-functioning
protein - a protein that changes the
outcome of a process
46Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Seven
47Nondisjunction
Nondisjunction is the failure of chromosomes to
separate during anaphase I of meiosis
The normal separation, disjunction, produces
daughter cells with 23 chromosomes each
48Nondisjunction
Nondisjunction results in one daughter cell with
24 chromosomes and the other with 22 chromosomes
49Nondisjunction
Monosomy is the result of the fertilization of a
normal gamete and one that has only 22 chromosomes
Trisomy is the product of the fertilization of a
normal gamete and one that has 24 chromosomes
50Nondisjunction
Disjunction
51Chromosome Abnormalities
- 1. Polyploidy
- 2. Aneuploidy
52- 1. Polyploidy (many sets) extra full sets of
chromosomes. - animal polyploids spontaneously abort or die
shortly after birth - plant polyploids are relatively common
- Example wheat (tetraploid or hexaploid)
- Tetraploid has 4 copies of each chromosome in
the cells - Hexaploid has 6 copies of each chromosome in the
cell
53- 2. Aneuploidy an extra (trisomy) or missing
(monosomy) chromosome usually due to
nondisjunction. - Most aneuploids spontaneously abort in humans.
- Nondisjunction
- A chromosome pair fails to separate, either at
the 1st or 2nd meiotic division. - Results Sperm or oocyte have either 2 copies of
a particular chromosome or none at all, rather
than the normal 1 copy. - If 1 of these abnormal gametes in a human is
fertilized, the resulting zygote has either 45 or
47 chromosomes instead of the normal 46.
54Aneuploidy Terminology
- Euploid has the normal chromosome number for
the species in the cells - Aneuploid has a missing or extra chromosome in
the cells - Extra genetic material is less dangerous than
less genetic material
55Autosomal Aneuploidy Vs. Sex Chromosome
Aneuploidy
- Autosomal aneuploidy usually results in mental
retardation because so many genes contribute to
brain function - Sex chromosome aneuploidy usually less severe
than autosomal aneuploidy
56- Autosomal aneuploids
- trisomy 13
- trisomy 18
- trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)has 1 extra chromosome
- Sex chromosome aneuploids
- Turner syndrome XO female
- Triplo-X XXX female
- Klinefelter syndrome XXY male
- Jacobs syndrome XYY male
57Genetic Disorders
Several genetic disorders are sex linked and
found predominantly in men, but can also be
present in women
The shorter Y chromosome means there is only one
allele that determines these traits
58Genetic Disorders
Male pattern baldness and color blindness are two
examples that are inconvenient, but non-life
threatening
Hemophilia, a condition in which the blood does
not clot correctly, can be deadly
59Genetic Disorders
Remember Any variance of the DNA base sequence
can cause the wrong amino acid to be inserted
into the polypeptide which could result in - a
non-functioning protein - a protein that
changes the outcome of a process
60Genetic Disorders
These mutations can lead to a number of human
health disorders
Some of these abnormalities are inconvenient,
while others can be lethal
61Genetic Disorders
Albinism is a condition in which the body does
not produce the pigment melanin
The phenotypic results are white hair, pale skin
and pink colored eyes
62Genetic Disorders
Albinism is the result of a homozygous recessive
genotype that produces a nonfunctional tyrosinase
enzyme
Melanin is synthesized from tyrosine by way of
the enzyme tyrosinase
63Genetic Disorders
Sickle cell disease is a condition in which red
blood cells are deformed due to the substitution
of one amino acid in a hemoglobin chain
64Genetic Disorders
The deformation of the RBCs inhibits the binding
of oxygen, causing anemia
The deformation also causes the sickled RBCs to
be sticky and agglutinate
65Genetic Disorders
Without treatment a child will usually die before
age two
Even with treatment most affected people die
before the age of fifty
66Genetic Disorders
The substitution of one amino acid is caused by a
recessive allele
Sickle cell is the result of a homozygous
recessive genotype that produces the malformed
hemoglobin
67Genetic Disorders
Approximately 8.5 of people of central and
southern African descent are carriers of the
allele
68Genetic Disorders
Phenylketonuria (PKU disease) is a disorder in
which the amino acid phenylalanine is not
metabolized due to the lack of an enzyme
69Genetic Disorders
PKU disease is the result of a homozygous
recessive genotype that does not produce the
enzyme that converts phenylalanine into tyrosine
70Genetic Disorders
Phenylalanine accumulates in the blood and acts
as a neurotoxin, causing brain damage and
retardation
Required tests on newborns now identify those
affected, which will be put on a low
phenylalanine diet
71Genetic Disorders
Remember Nondisjunction in gametes causes a
change in chromosome numbers that affects the
development of an embryo
Approximately 90 of nondisjunction events are
maternal in origin
72Genetic Disorders
The presence of an extra chromosome (trisomy) or
lack of one (monosomy) accounts for approximately
50 of all spontaneous abortions
73Genetic Disorders
Only three autosomal trisomies are survivable
trisomy 13 Patau syndrome trisomy 18
Edward syndrome trisomy 21 Down syndrome
74Genetic Disorders
Most fetuses with Patau or Edward syndrome will
die before birth
The few that are born are severely deformed and
usually die within their first year
75Genetic Disorders
Karyotype of Down syndrome (trisomy 21)
76Genetic Disorders
Down syndrome is the most survivable of the
trisomies, but approximately 75 die before birth
and 20 of those born will die before the age of
ten
77Genetic Disorders
Down syndrome effects short stature a
flat face with almond shaped eyes
enlarged protruding tongue broad hands with
short fingers varying degrees of mental
retardation
78Genetic Disorders
Of those that survive past the age of ten, life
expectancy has been extended to sixty years
However, after the age of forty many develop
early onset Alzheimer disease
79Genetic Disorders
Nondisjunction also occurs with the sex
chromosomes trisomy 23 Klinefelter
syndrome (XXY) trisomy 23
Triplo-X syndrome (XXX)
monosomy 23 Turner
syndrome (XO)
80Genetic Disorders
Triplo-X syndrome (XXX) results in a female
phenotype that is usually infertile and may
exhibit some intellectual impairment
81Genetic Disorders
Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) results in a sterile
male phenotype that is of normal intelligence and
upon the onset of puberty exhibits unusually long
arms, sparse body hair, undeveloped testes and
enlarged breasts
82Genetic Disorders
Turner syndrome (XO) results in a sterile female
phenotype that fails to develop secondary sex
characteristics at puberty and is usually short
in stature
Approximately 97 of all (XO) fetuses die before
birth
83Anatomy Physiology I Unit Five Objective Eight
84Mutations
A mutation is any change in the DNA of an organism
Mutations occur due to - pathogen infection
- exposure to radiation - introduction of
chemicals - nondisjunction
85Mutations
Mutations involve - base pair substitutions
- base pair insertions or deletions - DNA
segments
86Mutations
87- 3. Deletion part of a chromosome is missing.
4. Duplication part of a chromosome is present
twice.
5. Inversion part of a chromosome is reversed.
88- 6. Translocation nonhomologous chromosomes
exchange parts (reciprocal translocation) or
combine (Robertsonian translocation). - Certain viruses, drugs, and radiation can cause
translocations, but we often do not know how they
arise.