Heredity and Replication
Heredity and Replication
Heredity and Replication
The Basics
What is DNA?
It's a history book - a narrative of the journey of our
species through time.
It's a shop manual, with an incredibly detailed blueprint
for building every human cell.
And it's a transformative textbook of medicine, with
insights that will give health care providers immense
new powers to treat, prevent and cure disease."
- Francis Collins
What Does DNA Look Like?
A T
G C
Every cell in our body has the
same DNA….
Eye cell
Karyotype
Lung cell
Toe cell
How much DNA is in one cell?
Genome = 46 chromosomes
Gene = segment of
DNA that tells the
cell how to make a
certain protein.
Investigating Analyzing
interactions between genetic variation
DNA sequences, gene between
products, and individuals and
environmental factors populations
How Can We Use This Information?
Greater
Personalized medicine &
insight into
Pharmacogenetics
cognitive Insight into
function human origins
Allele 1 Allele 2
Allele 2
A2/A1 A2/A2
Homozygous dominant + Homozygous dominant +
Homozygous dominant Heterozygous
A A A A
A AA AA A AA AA
A AA AA a Aa Aa
Homozygous dominant +
Homozygous recessive Heterozygous + Heterozygous
a a A a
A Aa Aa A AA Aa
A Aa Aa a Aa aa
EXAMPLE
• Dan and Kim are going
to have a baby. Kim
has dimples in her
cheeks (a dominant
trait), while Dan does
not.
• What are the chances
Dan and Kim’s baby
will have dimples?
We know Dan and Kim’s
phenotypes (no dimples/dimples),
but what are their genotypes?
• Dan has the recessive trait (no dimples)
– He must have two recessive alleles
– Dan’s genotype can be represented as ‘dd’
• Kim has the dominant trait (dimples)
– But Kim could be homozygous dominant OR
heterozygous dominant
– Kim’s genotype can be either ‘DD’ or ‘Dd’
– Which one is it?
More information
d
Dan
d
Kim
D d
d Dd dd
Dan
d Dd dd
50% chance the baby will have the genotype ‘Dd’ and have
dimples
50% chance the baby will have the genotype ‘dd’ and not have
dimples
Clinical Application
P
Clinical Application continued . . .
P
Other things may change us, but we start and
end with family
-Anthony Brandt
• Sponsors
– NC Glaxo Smith Kline Foundation
– National Human Genome Research Institute
– Sigma XI Scientific Research Society
• Collaborative Partners
– North Carolina Department of Public Instruction
– Destiny Traveling Science Learning Program
– North Carolina Association for Biomedical Research
– National Human Genome Research Institute
– American Society for Human Genetics
• North Carolina Educators
– Amy Bradley, Hibriten High School; Cindy Byron, School of Inquiry and Life
Sciences at Asheville (SILSA); Anita Crowley, Lee County High School;
MaryAnne Gore, West Brunswick High School; Terry Howerton, The School of
Biotechnology at Atkins; Michael Kendall, East Bladen High School; Crystal
McDowell; Letitia Myles, E.E. Smith High School; Elizabeth Pressley, Bartlett
Yancey High School; Steven Ross, Harnett Central High School; Murphey
Wellman, North Iredell High School; Anita Willington, East Bladen High School;
Linda Woody, Reidsville High School