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GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 5 Linkage, Recombination, and Eukaryotic Gene Mapping

GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

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Page 1: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

• GENETICS ESSENTIALS•Concepts and Connections

• SECOND EDITION

• GENETICS ESSENTIALS•Concepts and Connections

• SECOND EDITION

Benjamin A. Pierce

© 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company

CHAPTER 5Linkage, Recombination, and

Eukaryotic Gene Mapping

Page 2: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Chapter 5 Outline

• 5.1 Linked Genes Do Not Assort Independently, 114

• 5.2 Linked Genes Segregate Together and Crossing Over Produces Recombination Between Them, 116

• 5.3 A Three-Point Testcross Can Be Used To Map Three Linked Genes, 128

• 5.4 Genes Can Be Located with Genomewide Association Studies, 137

Page 3: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

The case of male baldness

• X-linked or not?

• Study of linkage of a SNP and the association with male pattern baldness shows that they do not assort independently, they are transmitted together

Page 4: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

5.1 Linked Genes Do Not Assort Independently

• Linked genes: genes located close together on the same chromosome-Belong to the same linkage group

Page 5: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Recombination and alleles

Page 6: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Flower color and pollen shape

Page 7: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

F1 generation gives purple color and long pollen

• Appears that the purple is dominant to red and long is dominant to short pollen

• What with the F2, it is expected to get 9:3:3:1

• BUT…

Page 8: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

There is no 9:3:3:1 ratio; what happened

Page 9: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

5.2 Linked Genes Segregate Together and Crossing Over Produces Recombination

Between Them

• Fig. 5.3• Notation for crosses with linkage• Complete linkage leads to nonrecombinant

Gametes and nonrecombinant progeny• Crossing over with linked genes leads to

recombinant gametes and recombinant progeny• Figs. 5.4 & 5.5

Page 10: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H
Page 11: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Labeling alleles of two genes on a same chromosome

• Cross AA BB x aa bb can be represented byA B a bA B x a b

The F1 will be:A Ba b

Also it can be representedA Ba b

Page 12: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

The two test cross cases Linked v.s. not linked

• Linked genes give only nonrecombinant gametes

• Unlinked genes give both nonrecombinant and recombinant

Page 13: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Concept Check 1

For single crossovers, the frequency of recombinant gametes is half the frequency of crossing over because:a. a test cross between a homozygote and heterozygote produces ½ heterozygous and ½ homozygous progeny.b. the frequency of recombination is always 50%.c. each crossover takes place between only two of the four chromatids of a homologous pair.d. crossovers take place in about 50% of meiosis.

Page 14: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

What happens in recombination and the gamete formation

Page 15: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

5.2 Linked Genes Segregate Together and Crossing Over Produces Recombination

Between Them

• Calculating Recombination Frequency• Recombination frequency = (No. recombinant progeny/Total No. of

progeny) 100%• Fig. 5.6

• Coupling and Repulsion Configuration of Linked Genes• Coupling (cis configuration): wild-type alleles are found on one

chromosome; mutant alleles are found on the other chromosome.

Page 16: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Calculating frequencies

Page 17: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Calculating frequencies

Rec. Frequency = x100%

Rec. Frequency = x100%

8 + 7 55+53+8+7

# of recombinant progenyTotal # of progeny

Rec. Frequency = x100%

15123

Rec. Frequency = 12.2 % OR 0.122

Page 18: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

5.2 Linked Genes Segregate Together and Crossing Over Produces Recombination

Between Them

• Coupling and Repulsion Configuration of Linked Genes• Repulsion (trans configuration): wild-type allele and mutant allele

are found on the same chromosome.• Fig. 5.7

• Testing for Independent Assortment • Figs. 5.8 & 5.9

Page 19: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Coupling and repulsionp+ b+p b

p+ bp b+

Page 20: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Coupling and repulsion

Page 21: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

• Gene Mapping with Recombination Frequencies:• Genetic maps are determined by recombinant frequency.• Map unit and centiMorgans

• Constructing a Genetic Map with the Use of Two-Point Testcrosses• Fig. 5.10

5.2 Linked Genes Segregate Together and Crossing Over Produces Recombination

Between Them

Page 22: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H
Page 23: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Recombination frequencies and distances of genes

• Based on recombination frequencies genetic maps are generated

• Actual distances are on physical maps

• Recombination maps are approximations and are measured in map units or cM (centiMorgans)• One map unit equals to 1% recombination frequency

Page 24: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Genetic distances measured with recombination rates are approximately additive: if the distance from gene A to gene B is 5 m.u., the distance from gene B to gene C is 10 m.u., and the distance from gene A to gene C is 15 m.u.

Page 25: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Limitations of gene mapping

• If the genes are far apart and the frequency is 50% we cannot say if the genes are on different chromosomes or just to far on same chromosome

• Two genes that are relatively far will give underestimate of recombination events due to possibility of multiple crosses between the genes.

Page 26: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Example: two point cross to determine map of 4 genes

Page 27: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

5.3 A Three-Point Testcross Can Be Used to Map Three Linked Genes

• Constructing a Genetic Map with the Three-Point Testcross• Fig. 5.12• Determining the gene order• Determining the location of crossovers

• Fig. 5.13

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Double crossover :three genes

Page 29: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

A Three-Point Testcross Can Be Used to Map Three Linked

Genes

Page 30: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

• Calculating the recombination frequencies

• Interference and coefficient of coincidence

• Effect of multiple crossovers

5.3 A Three-Point Testcross Can Be Used to Map Three Linked Genes

Page 31: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Calculating the recombination frequencies

• Based on the numbers in the fruit fly testcross for three loci calculate the distances between the loci.• Recombinant progeny with a chromosome that

underwent crossing over between the eye-color locus (st) and the bristle locus (ss) include the single crossovers ( st+ / ss e  and  st / ss+ e+ ) and the two double crossovers ( st+ / ss / e+  and  st / ss+ / e ); Total of 755 progeny; so the recombination frequency between ss and st is:

Page 32: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Calculating the recombination frequencies

• Based on the numbers in the fruit fly testcross for three loci calculate the distances between the loci.• The map distance between the bristle locus (ss) and the

body locus (e) is determined in the same manner. The recombinant progeny that possess a crossover between ss and e are the single crossovers  st+ ss+ / e  and  st ss / e+  and the double crossovers  st+ / ss / e+  and  st / ss+ / e . The recombination frequency is:

Page 33: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Calculating the recombination frequencies

• Based on the numbers in the fruit fly testcross for three loci calculate the distances between the loci.• Finally, calculate the map distance between the outer two

loci, st and e. This map distance can be obtained by summing the map distances between st and ss and between ss and e (14.6 m.u. + 12.2 m.u. = 26.8 m.u.). We can now use the map distances to draw a map of the three genes on the chromosome:

Page 34: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Interference and coefficient of coincidence

• Calculate the proportion of double-recombinant gametes by using the multiplication rule of probability • Applying this rule, the proportion (probability) of gametes

with double crossovers between st and e is equal to the probability of recombination between st and ss multiplied by the probability of recombination between ss and e, or 0.146 × 0.122 = 0.0178.

• Multiplying this probability by the total number of progeny gives us the expected number of double-crossover progeny from the cross: 0.0178 × 755 = 13.4.

• Only 8 double crossovers—considerably fewer than the 13 expected—were observed in the progeny of the cross

Page 35: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

Interference and coefficient of coincidence

• Crossovers are frequently not independent events: the occurrence of one crossover tends to inhibit additional crossovers in the same region of the chromosome, and so double crossovers are less frequent than expected.• The degree to which one crossover interferes with

additional crossovers in the same region is termed the interference. To calculate the interference, we first determine the coefficient of coincidence, which is the ratio of observed double crossovers to expected double crossovers:

Page 36: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

In our case

• indicates that we are actually observing only 60% of the double crossovers that we expected on the basis of the single-crossover frequencies.

• Calculation of interference• Interference = 1 − coefficient of coincidence

• So the interference for our three-point cross is:• interference = 1 − 0.6 = 0.4

• 40% of recombinations are not observed due to intefrerence

Page 37: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H

5.4 Genes Can Be Located withGenomewide Association Studies

• Linkage analysis (genetic markers; anonymous markers)• Genome wide association studies• Haplotype• Linkage disequilibrium

Page 38: GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H