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By 1924, approximately 3,000 people had been involuntarily sterilized in America; the vast majority (2,500) in California. It is better for all the world, if ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
  • By 1924, approximately 3,000 people had been
    involuntarily sterilized in America the vast
    majority (2,500) in California.

It is better for all the world, if instead of
waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime
or to let them starve for their imbecility,
society can prevent those who are manifestly
unfit from continuing their kindThree
generations of imbeciles are enough. Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. U.S. Supreme Court
Buck vs. Bell, 1927
  • Buck v. Bell supplied a precedent for the
    eventual sterilization of approximately 8,300
    Virginians
  • sterilization of people in institutions for the
    mentally ill and mentally retarded continued
    through the mid-1970's. At one time or another,
    33 states had statutes under which more than
    60,000 Americans endured involuntary
    sterilization.

2
Announcements
  • How is powerpoint slide printing going?
  • Bring FlyLab to Lab next week meet in Brooks 101
    (computer lab) for the first part of lab
  • Homework this week Ch.2, problems 2, 10, 13,
    14, 19 (NOT turned in)
  • Answers to Ch.2 problems will be posted on
    Tuesday, Sept. 3 outside my office
  • http//www.eugenicsarchive.org/html/eugenics/essay
    8text.html
  • Quiz today!

3
Review of last lecture
  • Basic concepts that underlie the study of
    genetics DNA, genes, chromosomes
  • 2. Somatic cells have a diploid of
    chromosomes (2n)
  • each chromosome type (except X and Y) exists as
    a homologous pair
  • 3. Different forms of the same gene exist as
    alleles
  • ex. wt vs. mutant CFTR gene
  • 4. How do scientists investigate genetics?
  • 5. Genetics and society - eugenics,
    agriculture, medicine
  • 6. Mitosis is one part of the cell cycle
    important for many reasons
  • 7. Four phases of mitosis prophase, metaphase,
    anaphase, telophase

4
Outline of Lecture 3
  • I. Cell division is genetically regulated
  • II. Meiosis
  • III. Gregor Mendel - discovered basis for
    transmission of hereditary traits
  • IV. Monohybrid cross
  • V. Mendels postulates

5
I. Cell division is genetically regulated
  • Why are we interested in knowing how cell
    division is regulated?
  • if regulation is disrupted, uncontrolled cell
    division may
  • result..cancer
  • Most recent Nobel Prize was awarded to 3
    scientists who studied
  • genes that regulate the cell cycle, including
    Lee
  • Hartwell (director of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
    Research
  • Center) who studied cell division regulation in
    yeast
  • http//www.fhcrc.org/visitor/nobel/hartwell/accom
    plishments.html
  • There are 3 main checkpoints in the cell cycle

6
Three main checkpoints in the cell cycle
  • Is cell the correct size?
  • Is DNA damaged?
  • 2. Is DNA fully replicated?
  • Is DNA damage repaired?
  • 3. Have spindle fibers formed?
  • Have they attached to
  • chromosomes correctly?

1.
3.
2.
7
Why are cell cycle checkpoints important?
What might result if DNA repair has not finished?
Uncontrolled cell division could occur -
cancerous cell
Example p53 protein normally targets cells with
severe DNA damage to undergo programmed cell
death. (this removes them from the
population) If the p53 gene is mutated, damaged
cells will not be removed and may continue
dividing in an uncontrolled manner. Many
different types of cancers involve mutations of
p53.
8
II. Meiosis
a special cell division to make gametes (sperm
and egg)
Why would a regular mitosis be a problem in
making gametes?
If

then
4n
2n
2n
sperm,
egg
embryo
  • Meiotic cell division generates cells (sperm and
    eggs) with one- half the genetic material (2n to
    1n) - a reduction in chromosome number
  • Source of genetic variation - see mechanics

9
Key points of meiosis
  • Homologous chromosomes pair (synapse) to form a
    bivalent the four chromosomes form a tetrad.
  • Recombination during meiosis is the basis for
    genetic variation within species.
  • Two divisions reductional division and
    equational division, each with four phases

10
Mitosis vs. Meiosis
  • S phase 2N ? replication ? duplicated 2N
  • Mitosis duplicated 2N ? separation of sister
    chromatids ? each daughter cell is 2N
  • Meiosis duplicated 2N ?
  • meiosis I (reduction division) separation of
    homologous chromosomes ? synapsis of homologous
    chromosomes ? recombination duplicated N
  • meiosis II (equational division) duplicated N ?
    separation of sister chromatids ? N
  • Is Meiosis I or II more like mitosis?

11
Meiotic Prophase I(5 stages of prophase I)
  • 1. Leptonema slender-thread
  • Condensation chromatin starts to condense
  • 2. Zygonema paired-thread
  • Pairing homologues pair (synapsis) in
    synaptonemal complex (not in mitosis)
  • s.c. allows for crossing over if it doesnt
    form, no synapsis, no crossing over

12
Meiotic Prophase I (continued)
  • 3. Pachynema thick-thread
  • Ea. tetrad has 2 pr. sister chromatids
  • Recombination further condensation crossing
    over occurs
  • 4. Diplonema doubled-thread
  • tetrads visible, chiasmata visible (where sister
    chromatids contact)
  • 5. Diakinesis movement apart
  • Breakaway sister chromatids pull apart,
    chiasmata move to ends of each tetrad
  • NEBD, nucleolus disappears, spindle fibers attach
    to centromeres

13
Completion of Meiosis I
  • Metaphase I
  • tetrads align randomly independent assortment
  • Anaphase I
  • one-half of each tetrad, a dyad (homologue),
    moves to each pole
  • sister chromatids together
  • separation of tetrads is disjunction when they
    do not separate it is nondisjunction - more ch.
    10
  • Telophase I

Met I
Ana I
Tel I
14
Meiosis II
  • Mechanistically similar to mitosis.
  • Sister chromatids separate, producing monads.
  • Four haploid gametes can potentially form.
  • If crossing over occurred, ea. monad has combined
    genetic information

15
GametogenesisSpermatogenesis
  • Occurs after puberty, continuously in human
    males.
  • Equally-sized haploid products sperm
  • Crossing over can occur to create genetic
    recombination.

16
Gametogenesis Oogenesis
  • Begins during first months of embryogenesis in
    human females.
  • Meiosis arrests at diplotene of prophase I and
    resumes after puberty at ovulation.
  • Unequally-sized haploid products huge egg and
    tiny polar bodies.
  • Meiosis arrests again at metaphase II and resumes
    after fertilization.

17
Multiple Choice - self test
  • Which of the following is true about cell
    division
  • Meiosis I is more like mitosis because it is a
    reductional division (2n to 1n)
  • Meiosis I is more like mitosis because sister
    chromatids separate
  • Meiosis II is more like mitosis because it is an
    equational division (1n to 1n)
  • Meiosis is similar to mitosis because it
    generates genetic variation

18
III. Gregor Mendel
  • Monastery of St. Thomas, Brno, Czech Republic.
  • Taught physics and natural science.
  • Performed experiments 1856-1868, published in
    1866.
  • Why peas?
  • Easy to grow
  • Self-fertilize or can hybridize artificially
  • Matures in single season
  • Choice of contrasting traits

19
How Mendel performed his crosses with pea plants
20
Mendels 7 traits
1. 2. 3.
4.
5. 6.
7.
21
Modern genetic terminology
  • Phenotype - physical expression of a trait
  • Gene - Mendels unit factors of inheritance
  • Allele - different forms of a gene, e.g. D or d
  • Genotype - allelic composition of a trait
  • e.g. DD, Dd, or dd

22
More modern genetic terminology
  • Homozygous - genotype of identical alleles, e.g.
    DD or dd
  • Homozygote - homozygous individual
  • Heterozygous - genotype of different alleles,
    e.g. Dd
  • Heterozygote - heterozygous individual
  • Dominant and recessive - Alternative phenotypes
    when two alleles are expressed.
  • D is dominant and d is recessive if Dd and DD
    have the same phenotype

23
IV. Monohybrid cross (tall and dwarf pea plants)
24
Monohybrid Cross Punnett Square Method
(1) Define symbols D tall allele d dwarf
allele (2) State the cross (3) Diagram the
gametes (4) Complete the squares (5) Summarize
the results Genotype Phenotype
25
Reciprocal crosses
  • Results were the same regardless of which parent
    was used, e.g.
  • tall pollen pollinating dwarf eggs
  • dwarf pollen pollinating tall eggs
  • Therefore the results were not sex-dependent
  • Mendel proposed unit factors to explain his
    results

26
V. Mendels postulates
Postulate 1. Unit factors in pairs
  • Genetic characters are controlled by unit factors
    in pairs.
  • In other words, genes are present in two
    associated copies in diploid organisms.
  • For example, DD plants have two alleles for
    tallness, dd plants have two alleles for
    dwarfism.

27
Postulate 2. Dominance/recessiveness
  • In the case of unlike unit factors, one can be
    dominant and the other can be recessive.
  • In other words, when two different alleles of a
    gene are present, one may show its effect while
    the other may be masked.
  • For example, Dd plants have a tall allele D and a
    dwarf allele d, but are phenotypically tall.

28
Postulate 3. Segregation
  • During the formation of gametes, unit factors
    segregate randomly.
  • In other words, when sperm and eggs are formed,
    one of each allelic pair is randomly distributed
    to to each gamete.
  • For example, a Dd plant makes pollen or eggs,
    each randomly receives either the D allele or the
    d allele.

29
Practice Axial/Terminal Pods
  • In garden peas, an allele T for axial flowers is
    dominant to an allele t for terminal flowers.
  • In the F2 generation of a monohybrid cross, what
    is the expected ratio of axial terminal?
  • Among the F2 progeny, what proportion are
    heterozygous?
  • Among the F2 progeny with axial flowers, what
    proportion are heterozygous?

30
Round/Wrinkled Seeds
  • Round (W) dominant to wrinkled (w)
  • Whats the molecular basis? Starch and sugar
    content
  • Wrinkled seeds have higher glucose, water content
    before drying, larger loss of seed volume during
    drying

Loss-of-function in wrinkled allele
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