12.9 Linked Genes Violate The Law of Independent Assortment
12.9 Linked Genes Violate The Law of Independent Assortment
When two genes are located on the same chromosome, they are
considered linked, and their alleles tend to be transmitted through
meiosis together. To exemplify this, imagine a dihybrid cross
involving flower color and plant height in which the genes are next
to each other on the chromosome. If one homologous chromosome
has alleles for tall plants and red flowers, and the other chromosome
has genes for short plants and yellow flowers, then when the
gametes are formed, the tall and red alleles will tend to go together
into a gamete and the short and yellow alleles will go into other
gametes. These are called the parental genotypes because they have
been inherited intact from the parents of the individual producing
gametes. But unlike if the genes were on different chromosomes,
there will be no gametes with tall and yellow alleles and no gametes
with short and red alleles. If you create a Punnett square with these
gametes, you will see that the classical Mendelian prediction of a
9:3:3:1 outcome of a dihybrid cross would not apply. As the distance
between two genes increases, the probability of one or more
crossovers between them increases and the genes behave more like
they are on separate chromosomes. Geneticists have used the
proportion of recombinant gametes (the ones not like the parents)
as a measure of how far apart genes are on a chromosome. Using
this information, they have constructed linkage maps of genes on
chromosomes for well-studied organisms, including humans.