Title: Announcements
1Announcements
- You should be working on chapter 6 problems 10,
14, 15, 28. -
- Reminder- papers on Monk in the garden due in
lab section 10/1, 10/2. I encourage you to see
me to discuss your outlines. I will look over
first drafts also. - September is sickle cell awareness month!
2Sickle Cell Resources
- Sickle Cell Society http//www.sicklecellsociety.
org/index.htm - Sickle Cell Anemia Foundation
- http//www.4sicklecellanemia.org/
- Harvard Medical School Joint Center for Sickle
Cell and Thalassemic Disorders
http//sickle.bwh.harvard.edu/ - See Management of Patients section
3Sickle-cell Trait and Disease
- HbA/HbA
- Normal RBCs never sickle.
- HbS/HbS
- Sickle cell disease severe, often fatal anemia
abnormal hemoglobin causes RBCs to sickle. - HbA/HbS
- No anemia RBCs sickle only under low O2
4Levels of Dominance in Sickle-cell Trait
- Anemia (organismal)
- HbA completely dominant to HbS
- RBC shape (cellular)
- Incomplete dominance since normal at high O2 ,
sickle at low O2 - Hemoglobin (molecular)
- Codominance since both A and S hemoglobin can be
detected electrophoretically
5Outline of Lecture 11
- I. Genes linked on the same chromosome segregate
together - II. Crossing-over
- III. 3-Point Mapping
6I. Linkage and Crossing Over
- Linkage happens when genes dont assort
independently. - Genes on the same chromosome are linked.
- Genes linked on the same chromosome segregate
together. - Crossing Over involves reciprocal exchange of
chromosome segments between homologs increases
genetic variation (recombination).
7chiasma
Chiasmata Between SynapsedHomologs During
Meiosis Prophase I
8Crossing Over and Mapping
- Linkage without crossing over creates only
parental (noncrossover) gametes. - Linkage with crossing over creates parental
gametes and recombinant (crossover) gametes. - Interlocus distance is proportional to the degree
of crossing over between. - Little or no crossing over in close genes.
- Frequent, even multiple crossovers between
distant genes. - Chromosome map, determined from recombination
rates, indicates relative locations of genes on
a chromosome.
9No Linkage Independent Assortment
10Linkage without Recombination
11Linkage with Recombination
12Complete Linkage P1 Cross
In complete linkage only parental gametes form
13Complete Linkage F1 Cross
Not 1111 testcross ratio! 11 testcross ratio
w/linkage
Not 9331 phenotypic ratio! 121 ? (complete)
linkage ratio
14Linkage Ratio
- The F2 phenotypic ratio unique to two linked
genes in cross of double heterozygotes. - If completely linked, should be
- 121 for F1 X F1
- 11 for F1 X test cross parent
- Linkage group - group of genes which show
linkage in theory N (the haploid number).
15II. Morgan and Crossing Over
- Morgan discovered crossing over when studying two
genes on X chromosome in Drosophila. - Morgan proposed that the chiasmata visible on
chromosomes were regions of crossing over. - Occurs between nonsister chromatids.
16Crosses of Two X-linked genes
Expect only parental types if no crossing over
occurs - Confirm this for yourself with a
Punnett square.
17(No Transcript)
18Morgans Interpretation
- Recombination was caused by linear arrangement
of genes and crossing over. - Frequency of recombination was determined by
distance between genes - y and w recombination rate 1.3
- w an m recombination rate 37.2
- Therefore y and w were closer together on the
chromosome, while w an m are farther apart.
19Sturtevant and Mapping
- Sturtevant, Morgans undergraduate student,
discovered frequency of crossing over between
each pair of the 3 genes - yellow, white 0.5
- white, miniature 34.5
- yellow, miniature 35.4
Do you see a pattern?
20Sturtevants Interpretation
- Sturtevant reasoned that recombination
frequencies were additive, so order of genes on
chromosome was yellow-white-miniature.
21You only see recombination when it occurs between
the genes you are watching!
22Single Crossovers Non-crossover (Parental) and
Crossover (Recombinant) Gametes
What is the maximum recombination?
23Map Units
- One map unit (centimorgan, cM) 1 recombination
between two genes - yellow and white are 0.5 cM apart
- yellow and miniature are 35.4 cM apart
- white and miniature are (35.4-0.5) 34.9 cM
apart - In Drosophila, crossing over occurs only in
females, never in males.
24III. Three-Point Mapping
- You can add recombination between two genes to
find the order of genes pretty well. - But the only way to be sure of the order of three
genes is by Three-Point Mapping, which considers
3 genes at once. - You look for rare double-crossover events, and
that is the clue to the gene order.
25Double Crossovers
26Probability of Double Crossovers
- Equals product of each of their individual
probabilities - if PAxB 0.20 and PBxC 0.30 then
- PAxBxC (0.20)(0.30) 0.06 6
- Criteria for 3-point mapping cross
- Crossover gametes heterozygous at all loci
- Genotypes can be determined from phenotypes
- Sufficient numbers for representative sample
273-Point Mapping in Drosophila
- Cross a y ec w female with wildtype male to get
triply heterozygous mutant female and triply
hemizygous mutant male. - Cross the F1 and examine the F2 phenotypes
- NCO noncrossover
- SCO single crossover (2 types)
- DCO double crossover
- NCO
- y ec w 4685
- 4759 94.44
- SCO
- y 80
- ec w 70 1.50
- y w 193
- ec 207 4.00
- DCO
- y ec 3
- w 3 0.06
- Total 1000 100
283-point Mapping Explanation
29To Deduce the Order from a 3-Point Cross Method 1
1. Group the 8 phenotypic groups into 4
reciprocal pairs. 2. The Non-crossover (NCO) pair
is the largest group. The Double crossover (DCO)
pair is the smallest group. 3a. Note which gene
switches from the parental arrangement in DCO
(present on its own) - that one is in the middle.
30Possible Orders of 3 Genes
- If yellow were in the middle, yellow phenotype
would show up in DCO. - If echinus were in the middle, echinus phenotype
would show up in DCO. - white is actually in the middle since white
phenotype shows up in actual DCO data.
31To Deduce the Order from a 3-Point Cross Method 2
- 3b. Assume one of the 3 possible gene orders and
work the problem. If you later find a
contradiction, try one of the other orders. - 4b. Determine whether a DCO with your arrangement
will produce the observed DCO phenotypes. - You will encounter a contradiction unless you
have chosen the correct gene order. Keep trying
until you get the right one.
32To calculate recombination
- Total crossovers between y and w (SCO1 DCO)
- Total crossovers between w and ec (SCO2 DCO)
33Types of Double ExchangesNot All are Detectable
34Genetic Map of Drosophila melanogaster
35Creighton and McClintock Experiment Proved
Crossing Over was a Physical Event
- In maize, colorless (c)/colored (C), starchy
(Wx)/waxy (wx) linked on chromosome 9. - Cytological markers on one parental homolog (knob
on one end and translocated segment on the other
end) allowed direct observation.
36Crossovers Between Sister Chromatids (SCEs)
- Revealed by Harlequin chromosomes labeled
during DNA replication - Occurs between mitotic sister chromatids.
- No recombination
- Significance unknown, but increased incidence
correlated with some human diseases.