Top Banner
More Genetics & Pedigrees
16

More Genetics & Pedigrees

Dec 31, 2015

Download

Documents

hedley-ellison

More Genetics & Pedigrees. Incomplete Dominance. Multiple Alleles & Codominance. Additive effect of multiple genes on a single phenotype Results in normal distribution Examples: skin color, height. Polygenic Traits. A gene at one locus alters the expression of a gene at another locus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: More Genetics & Pedigrees

More Genetics & Pedigrees

Page 2: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Incomplete Dominance

Page 3: More Genetics & Pedigrees
Page 4: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Multiple Alleles & Codominance

Page 5: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Polygenic Traits

• Additive effect of multiple genes on a single phenotype

• Results in normal distribution

• Examples: skin color, height

Page 6: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Epistasis

• A gene at one locus alters the expression of a gene at another locus.

• Example: – Black coat (B) is

dominant to brown (b)– Pigment color (C) is

dominant to no pigment color (c)

Page 7: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Effect of Environment on Phenotype

More acidic soil Less acidic soil

Page 8: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Pleiotropic Effects

Page 9: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Pedigree

MaleFemale

HeterozygousShows trait

Page 10: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Recessive characteristics

Inheritance pattern•Trait tends to skip generations

Page 11: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Probabilities

Aa aaChild will have recessive trait?

aa

Chance of “a” allele from dad?

1/2

Chance of “a” allele from mom?

2/2 (1)

Total

1/2 x 1 = 1/2

Page 12: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Dominant characteristics•Trait does not skip generations•Occurs frequently within a family

Page 13: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Pedigree Analysis

Page 14: More Genetics & Pedigrees

Sex linked characteristics•Tend to occur more in males than in females

•Color-blindness •Hemophilia

Page 15: More Genetics & Pedigrees

X-linked Recessives: More commonly seen in Males

• Why?• Males only need one recessive

allele to see trait.• E.g. Color-blindness

• XC – 92 % of alleles• Xc – 8 % of alleles

Females Males

92%

8%

(0.92)(0.92) = 85%

2x (0.92)(0.08) = 15%

(0.08)(0.08) = 0.64%

XCXC

XCXc

XcXc

XCyXcy

Page 16: More Genetics & Pedigrees

A woman with normal vision whose father was color-blind marries a color-blind male. What percent of the couple’s sons will be color-blind?

1. All

2. 75%

3. 50%

4. 25%