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Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one inherited from your mother and one inherited from your father. 46,XY male karyotype

Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

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Page 1: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are

controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one inherited from your mother and one inherited

from your father.

46,XY male karyotype

Page 2: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

– Autosomes are the 22 pairs of chromosomes that are not the sex chromosomes

– Alleles are all of the alternate forms of a gene (ie. B and b)

– Recessive means it takes two abnormal copies to exhibit the full blown phenotype

– Examples of autosomal recessive disorders are : cystic fibrosis, sickle-cell disease, PKU

– A Punnet Square demonstrating inheritance of an autosomal recessive deafness is found at the right

Most inherited disorders are caused

by autosomal recessive alleles

Figure 9.9A

D D

d d

NormalDd

NormalDd

DDNormal

DdNormal(carrier)

DdNormal(carrier)

ddDeaf

Eggs Sperm

PARENTS

OFFSPRING

Page 3: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Found on Chromosome 12

Page 4: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

• A few inherited disorders are caused by dominant alleles. Dominant alleles hide recessive alleles, phenotypically.

Figure 9.9B

– Examples: achondroplasia, Huntington’s disease

Page 5: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Autosomal Dominant Inheritance

Page 6: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Table 9.9

Page 7: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

• Most sex-linked human disorders are due to recessive alleles

• These sex linked alleles are forms of genes found on the X chromosome. A male has only one X chromosome

– Examples: hemophilia, red-green color blindness

– These are mostly seen in males, but can be seen in females.

– A male receives a single X-linked allele from his mother, and will have the disorder, while a female has to receive the allele from both parents to be affected

Sex-linked disorders affect mostly males

Figure 9.23A

Page 8: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

– Their inheritance pattern reflects the fact that males have one X chromosome and females have two

Figure 9.22B-D

– These figures illustrate inheritance patterns for white eye color (r) in the fruit fly, an X-linked recessive trait

Female Male Female Male Female Male

XrYXRXR

XRXr

XRY

XR Xr

Y

XRXr

XR

Xr XRXR

XR

Y

XRY

XrXR XRY

XrY

XRXr

XR

Xr

Xr

YXRXr

XrXr XRY

XrY

XrY

R = red-eye alleler = white-eye allele

Page 9: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

X-Linked Recessive Inheritance

Page 10: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

X-Linked Dominant Inheritance

Page 11: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

• When an offspring’s phenotype—such as flower color— is in between the phenotypes of its parents, it exhibits incomplete dominance

Incomplete dominance results in intermediate phenotypes

P GENERATION

F1 GENERATION

F2 GENERATION

RedRR

Gametes R r

Whiterr

PinkRr

R r

R R

r r

1/21/2

1/2

1/21/2

1/2 SpermEggs

PinkRr

PinkrR

Whiterr

RedRR

Figure 9.12A

Page 12: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

• Incomplete dominance in human hypercholesterolemia (high levels of cholesterol in the blood)

Figure 9.12B

GENOTYPES:

HHHomozygous

for ability to makeLDL receptors

HhHeterozygous

hhHomozygous

for inability to makeLDL receptors

PHENOTYPES:

LDL

LDLreceptor

Cell

Normal Mild disease Severe disease

Page 13: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Codominance-The individual expresses both phenotypes and neither is

dominant.

Page 14: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Type AB express both antigens

Page 15: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Mitochondrial Gene Inheritance

Page 16: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Mitochondrial Disorders

Page 17: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Mitochondrial Disorders• mtDNA Point mutations

CardiomyopathyLeber's optic neuropathyLeigh's syndromeMELASMERRFNARP/MILS

Single deletion or duplicationAtaxia, LeukodystrophyDiabetes: Maternal inheritance   Kearns-SayrePearson'sPEO: SporadicMultiple deletionsAgingMyositis  Inclusion body  COX- muscle fibersMNGIEPEOWolfram

•Depletion of mtDNA   Infantile myopathy  Fatal  "Later-onset"AZT treatmentSeveral types of mtDNA defectDeafnessDiabetesExternal ophthalmoplegia (PEO)  Sporadic  Maternal  Dominant  RecessiveLeigh'sMyopathyRhabdomyolysisSensory neuropathySystemic disorders

Page 18: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

Mitochondrial Inheritance

Mitochondrial disease begins to become apparent once the number of affected mitochondria reaches a certain level; this phenomenon is called 'threshold expression'.

Page 19: Inheritance Patterns Many inherited disorders in humans are controlled by a single gene. All of our somatic cells possess two copies of each gene, one

In class……………………….

• What is the mode of inheritance of the disorder you are researching?

• If you are studying a particular cell type, are there diseases associated with this cell type when it is mutated and how are those diseases inherited?