Genetics and Inheritance
Gregor Mendel was an Austrian Monk in the late 1800s who experimented with pea plants to find trait inheritance patterns in successive generations.
Mendel's Laws
- Principle of Segregation - Two alleles of a homologous pair of chromosomes separate (segregate) during gamete formation such that each gamete receives only one allele
- Principle of Independent Assortment - Alleles of a gene pair assort independently of other gene pairs. The segregation of one pair of alleles in no way alters the segregation of another pair of alleles*
*This law doesis not always hold,true, when genes are linked on a chromosome, explained later
Terminology
Homozygous - An individual who has two copies of the same allele at a locus
Heterozyous - An individual who has two different alleles at the same locus
Dominant alleles only needs one copy to show the phenotype
Recessive alleles need two copies of the allele to show the phenotype
Co-dominance means the phenotype for the heterozygote is different from either homozygote
Example - Blood types A and B are co-dominant to each other, but dominant to type O:
Gene inheritance only happens during Meiosis, not mitosis (Ex.although ABmutations bloodcan type)happen in both). If you have genes close to each other, they are more likely to be inherited together, which is why Mandel's second law does not always hold.
Pedigree Drawing
Diagonal line mean the person is deceased. Filled in represents individuals effected by a certain condition of interest, a half filled in shape represents a "carrier" of the condition who does not express it.
- Carrier - Individuals who carry a gene of interest
- Obligate carrier - one who must be a carrier due to observed affected in pedigree
Mendelian Diseases
Mendelian diseases are disorders caused by a mutation in a single gene. Follow a specific form of inheritance, the most common:
- Autosomal dominant- needs a single copy of the mutated disease gene to express the disease
- Vertical transmission of the disease phenotype
- Lack of skipped generations
- Roughly equal numbers of affected males and females
- Father-son transmission may be observed
- Roughly half of the offspring of an affected parent will be effected
- Autosomal recessive - Two copies of the mutated gene required to express disease.
- Clustering of the disease phenotype in siblings
- The disease is not seen in parents
- Equal numbers of affected males and females
- Consanguinity (marriage between related individuals) may be present
- X-linked recessive
- Never passed from father to son
- Males are much more likely to be affected
- Affected males get the disease from their unaffected carrier mothers; all of their daughters are obligate carriers
- Sons of carrier females have a 50% chance of receiving the mutant alleles
- Typically passed from an affected grandfather to 50% of his grandsons through daughters
- X-linked dominant
- Daughters of affected males will inherit the disease from their fathers
- Sons of the affected males cannot inherit the disease from their father (they receive Y chromosome from father)
- Sons and daughters of affected heterozygous mothers have 50% chance of inheriting the disease
- On average, twice as many affected females compared to affected males
- Males are often more severely affected
- May be associated with miscarriage or lethality in males