Mendel self-pollinated the F2 plants. He found that dwarf F2plants continued to generate dwarf plants in F3 & F4. He concluded that genotype of the dwarfs was homozygous- tt.
Backcross and Testcross
§ Backcross: Crossing of F1 hybrid with its any of parent.
§ Testcross: Crossing of an F1 hybrid with its recessive parent (Test cross ratio=1:1). It is used to find out the unknown genotype. (See figure in T.B. Page: 75)
Mendel conducted test cross to determine the F2genotype.
Mendel?s Principles or Laws of Inheritance
1. First Law (Law of Dominance)
§Characters are controlled by discrete units called factors.
§Factors occur in pairs.
§In a dissimilar pair of factors one member of the pair dominates (dominant) the other (recessive).
2. Second Law (Law of Segregation)
?During gamete formation, the factors (alleles) of a character pair present in parents segregate from each other such that a gamete receives only one of the 2 factors?.
Homozygous parent produces similar gametes.
Heterozygous parent produces two kinds of gametes each having one allele with equal proportion.
The concept of dominance
In heterozygotes, there are dominant and recessive alleles. The normal (unmodified or functioning) allele of a gene produces a normal enzyme that is needed for the transformation of a substrate. The modified allele is responsible for production of
(i) The normal/less efficient enzyme or
(ii) A non-functional enzyme or
(iii) No enzyme at all
In the first case:The modified allele will produce the same phenotype like unmodified allele. It becomes dominant.
In 2ndand 3rd cases: The phenotype will dependent only on the functioning of the unmodified allele. Here, the modified allele becomes recessive.
NON-MENDELIAN INHERITANCE
1. Incomplete Dominance
- It is an inheritance in which heterozygous offspring shows intermediate character b/w two parental characteristics.
E.g. Flower colour in snapdragon (dog flower or Antirrhinum sp.) and Mirabilis jalapa (4?O clock plant). Alleles from parent 1 | Alleles from parent 2 | Genotype of offspring | Blood types (phenotype) |
IA | IA | IA IA | A |
IA | IB | IA IB | AB |
IA | i | IAi | A |
IB | IA | IA IB | AB |
IB | IB | IB IB | B |
IB | i | IBi | B |
i | i | ii | O |
When IAand IB are present together they both express their own types of sugars. This is due to co-dominance.
3. Multiple allelism
Here more than two alleles govern the same character. E.g. ABO blood grouping (3 alleles: IA, IB& i).
4. Pleiotropy
Here, a single gene produces more than one effect. E.g. starch synthesis in pea seeds, sickle cell anaemia etc.
Starch synthesis in pea plant:
Starch is synthesized effectively by BB and therefore, large starch grains are produced. bb have lesser efficiency in starch synthesis and produce smaller starch grains.
If starch grain size is considered as phenotype, the alleles show incomplete dominance.
INHERITANCE OF TWO GENES (Dihybrid cross)
Dihybrid cross: A cross between two parents differing in 2 pairs of contrasting characters.
Mendel made some dihybrid crosses. E.g. Cross b/w pea plant with round shaped & yellow coloured seeds (RRYY) and wrinkled shaped & green coloured seeds (rryy).
On observing the F2, Mendel found that the yellow and green colour segregated in a 3:1 ratio. Round and wrinkled seed shape also segregated in a 3:1 ratio.
Dihybrid Phenotypic ratio= Round yellow 9: Round green 3: Wrinkled yellow 3: Wrinkled green 1, i.e. 9:3:3:1
The ratio of 9:3:3:1 can be derived as a combination series of 3 yellow: 1 green, with 3 round: 1 wrinkled.
i.e. (3: 1) (3: 1) = 9: 3: 3: 1
Dihybrid genotypic ratio: 1:2:1:2:4:2:1:2:1
RRYY =1 RRYy =2 RrYY =2
RrYy =4 RRyy =1 Rryy =2
rrYY =1 rrYy =2 rryy =1
Third Law (Mendel?s Law of Independent Assortment):
It states that ?when more than one pair of characters are involved in a cross, factor pairs independently segregate from the other pair of characters?.
CHROMOSOMAL THEORY OF INHERITANCE
Mendel?s work remained unrecognized till 1900 because,
1. Communication was not easy.
2. His mathematical approach was new and unacceptable.
3. The concept of genes (factors) as stable and discrete units was not accepted. (Mendel could not explain the continuous variation seen in nature).
4. Mendel could not provide any physical proof for the existence of factors.
In 1900, de Vries, Correns & von Tschermakindependently rediscovered Mendel?s results.
Chromosomal Theory (1902): Walter Sutton & Theodore Boveri say that the pairing and separation of a pair of chromosomes lead to segregation of a pair of factors they carried. Suttonunited chromosomal segregation with Mendelian principles and called it the chromosomal theory of inheritance. It states that,
· Chromosomes are vehicles of heredity. They are transmitted from parents to offspring, i.e. they are immortal.
· Two identical chromosomes form a homologous pair.
· They segregate at the time of gamete formation.
· Independent pairs segregate independently of each other.
· Chromosomes are mutable.
Genes are present on chromosomes. Hence they show similar behaviours.
Thomas Hunt Morgan proved chromosomal theory of inheritance using fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster).
It is the suitable material because,
a. It breeds very quickly
b. Short generation time (life cycle: 12-14 days)
c. Breeding can be done throughout the year.
d. Hundreds of progenies per mating.
e. They can grow on simple synthetic medium.
f. Male and female flies are easily distinguishable.
g. It has many types of hereditary variations that can be seen with low power microscopes.
Linkage and Recombination
· Recombination: It is the generation of non-parental gene combinations.
· Linkage: Physical association of 2 or more genes on a chromosome. They do not show independent assortment.
Morgan carried out several dihybrid crosses in Drosophilato study sex-linked genes. E.g.
Cross 1: Yellow-bodied, white-eyed females
X
Brown-bodied, red-eyed males (wild type)
Cross 2: White-eyed, miniature winged
X
Red eyed, large winged (wild type)
(See figure in T.B. Page: 84)
Morgan intercrossed their F1 progeny. He found that
§ The two genes did not segregate independently of each other and the F2 ratio deviated from the 9:3:3:1 ratio.
§ Genes were located on the X chromosome
§ When two genes were situated on the same chromosome, the proportion of parental gene combinations was much higher than the non-parental type. This is due linkage.
§ Genes white & yellow were very tightly linked and showed only 1.3% recombination while white & miniature wing showed 37.2%recombination (loosely linked).
§ Tightly linked genes show low recombination. Loosely linked genes show high recombination.
Alfred Sturtevantused the recombination frequency between gene pairs as a measure of the distance between genes and ?mapped? their position on the chromosome.
Genetic maps are used as a starting point in the sequencing of genomes as was done in Human Genome Project.
MUTATION
It is a sudden heritable change in DNA sequences resulting in changes in the genotype and the phenotype of an organism.
· Frame-shift mutation: Loss (deletions) or gain (insertion/ duplication) of a DNA segment.
· Point mutation: Mutation due to change in a single base pair of DNA. E.g. sickle cell anemia.
· Mutation results in Chromosomal abnormalities (aberrations). Chromosomal aberrations are seen in cancer cells.
· Mutagens (agents which induce mutation) include,
- Physical mutagens: UV radiation, ?, ?, ? rays, X-ray etc.
- Chemical mutagens: Mustard gas, phenol, formalin etc.
PEDIGREE ANALYSIS
In human, control crosses are not possible. So the study of family history about inheritance is used. Such an analysis of traits in several generations of a family is called pedigree analysis. The representation or chart showing family history is called family tree (pedigree).
Symbols used in pedigree analysis
In human genetics, pedigree study is utilized to trace the inheritance of a specific trait, abnormality or disease.
GENETIC DISORDERS
2 types: Mendelian disorders and Chromosomal disorders.
1. Mendelian Disorders
· Caused by alteration or mutation in the single gene.
· The pattern of inheritance of Mendelian disorders can be traced in a family by the pedigree analysis.
· E.g. Haemophilia, Cystic fibrosis, Sickle-cell anaemia, Colour blindness, Phenylketonuria, Thalesemia, etc.
· Mendelian disorders may be dominant or recessive.
· By pedigree analysis one can easily understand whether the trait is dominant or recessive.
Pedigree analysis of (a) Autosomal dominant trait (E.g. Myotonic dystrophy) (b) Autosomal recessive trait (E.g. Sickle-cell anaemia).
Haemophilia (Royal disease):
· Sex linked recessive disease.
· In this, a protein involved in the blood clotting is affected.
· A simple cut results in non-stop bleeding.
· The heterozygous female (carrier) for haemophilia may transmit the disease to sons.
· The possibility of a female becoming a haemophilic is very rare because mother has to be at least carrier and father should be haemophilic (unviable in the later stage of life).
· Queen Victoria was a carrier of the disease. So her family pedigree shows a number of haemophilic descendents.
Sickle-cell anaemia:
· This is an autosome linked recessive trait.
· It can be transmitted from parents to the offspring when both the partners are carrier for the gene (or heterozygous).
· The disease is controlled by a pair of allele, HbA and HbS.
Homozygous dominant (HbAHbA): normal
Heterozygous (HbAHbS): carrier; sickle cell trait
Homozygous recessive (HbSHbS): affected
· The defect is caused by the substitution of Glutamic acid (Glu) by Valine (Val) at the sixth position of the ?-globin chain of the haemoglobin (Hb).
· This is due to the single base substitution at the sixth codon of the ?-globin gene from GAGto GUG.
· The mutant Hb molecule undergoes polymerization under low oxygen tension causing the change in shape of the RBC from biconcave disc to elongated sickle like structure.
Phenylketonuria:
· An inborn error of metabolism.
· Autosomal recessive trait.
· The affected individual lacks an enzyme (phenylalanine hydroxylase) that converts the amino acid phenylalanine into tyrosine.As a result, phenylalanine accumulates and converts into phenyl pyruvic acid and other derivatives.
· They accumulate in brain resulting in mental retardation. These are also excreted through urine because of poor absorption by kidney.
2. Chromosomal disorders
They are caused due to absence or excess or abnormal arrangement of one or more chromosomes. 2 types:
a. Aneuploidy: Thegain or loss of chromosomes due to failure of segregation of chromatids during cell division. It includes,
· Nullysomy (2n-2): A chromosome pair is lost from diploid set.
· Monosomy (2n-1): One chromosome is lost from diploid set.
· Trisomy (2n+1):One chromosome is added to diploid set.
· Tetrasomy (2n+2): 2 chromosomes are added to diploid set.
b.Polyploidy (Euploidy): It is an increase in a whole set of chromosomesdue to failure of cytokinesis after telophase stage of cell division. This is often seen in plants.
Examples for chromosomal disorders
§ Down?s syndrome (Mongolism): It is the presence of an additional copy of chromosome number 21 (trisomy of 21).
- Genetic constitution:45 A + XX or 45 A + XY (i.e. 47 chromosomes).
- Features:
o They are short statured with small round head.
o Broad flat face.
o Furrowed big tongue and partially open mouth.
o Many ?loops? on finger tips.
o Palm is broad with characteristic palm crease.
o Retarded physical, psychomotor &mental development.
o Congenital heart disease.
§ Klinefelter?s Syndrome: It is the presence of an additional copy of X-chromosome in male.
- Genetic constitution: 44 A + XXY (i.e. 47 chromosomes).
- Features:
o Overall masculine development, however, the feminine development is also expressed. E.g. Development of breast (Gynaecomastia).
o Sterile.
o Mentally retarded.
§ Turner?s syndrome: This is due to the absence of one of the X chromosomes in female.
- Genetic constitution: 44 A + X0 (i.e. 45 chromosomes).
- Features:
o Sterile, Ovaries are rudimentary.
o Lack of other secondary sexual characters.
o Dwarf.
oMentally retarded