Extension of Mendel's Principles (Mendelian Inheritance)
Extension of Mendel's Principles (Mendelian Inheritance)
• Inheritance patterns that obey the law of segregation and the law of
independent assortment are classified as examples of Mendelian inheritance.
• However, research in the early 20th century showed that genes can exist in
more than two allelic states and each allele can have a different effect on
the phenotype.
• Take the flower color of the snapdragon, Antirrhinum majus, for e.g.
Incomplete dominance and codominance
• A trait can be determined by more than one pair of allele (Cc) – nonallelic
gene can have similar function to determine traits.
• How F2 phenotypes are produced – give one unit to each colour allele.
• If given one unit to AA (Aa), BB has 2 units (one unit for each B).
• Blood factors in the serum portion of the blood reacts specifically with
antigens.
Homozygotes for M allele – blood type M (produces M antigen).
Homozygotes for N allele – blood type N (produces N antigen).
• Anti-M serum recognizes only the M antigen, anti-N serum recognizes
only the N antigen on the human blood cells → reaction causes blood cells
to clump together or agglutinate.
• Heterozygotes for M and N alleles produce M and N antigens → blood
cells agglutinate when anti-M and anti-N serum are present.
• Because the two alleles appear to contribute independently to the
phenotype of the heterozygotes, they are said to be codominant.
The M antigen allele – M
The N antigen allele – N
AM 1/16 AA MM 1/16
A MN 2/16 AA MN 2/16
AN 1/16 AA NN 1/16
AB M 2/16 AB MM 2/16
AB MN 4/16 AB MN 4/16
AB N 2/16 AB NN 2/16
BM 1/16 BB MM 1/16
B MN 2/16 BB MN 2/16
BN 1/16 BB NN 1/16
• Eg. 2 : Height and thickness of tomato plant hair (incomplete dominance at
one pair of allele)
• We wish to know whether the cinnabar and scarlet are alleles of a single
color-determining gene or if they are mutations in two different genes.
• To know the answer…cross the homozygous mutant strains with each
other to produce hybrid progeny.. E.g: cinnabar x scarlet, cinnabar x
cinnabar-2, cinnabar-2 x scarlet.
If the hybrids have:
• Bright red eyes (mutant phenotype) – cinnabar
and scarlet mutations are alleles of the same
gene
• Dark red eyes (WT phenotype) - cinnabar and
scarlet are not alleles of the same gene but
rather, mutations in two different genes – each
involved in the control of eye pigmentation.
Test of a third mutation called cinnabar-2 for
allelism with the cinnabar and scarlet mutations:
• hybrid combination of cinnabar-2 and cinnabar
has bright red eyes (mutant phenotype) – the
mutations cinnabar and cinnabar-2 are alleles of
the same gene controlling eye pigmentation.
• hybrid combination of cinnabar-2 and scarlet
has dark red eyes (WT phenotype) - the
mutations scarlet and cinnabar-2 are not alleles
of the same gene. Rather the scarlet mutation
defines another color-determining gene.
Variation Among the Effects of Mutations
• Genes are identified by mutations that alter the phenotype in some way.
E.g a mutation may change the color or shape of the eyes, alter a behavior
may cause even death → tremendous variation among the effects of
individual mutations suggests that each organism carries many different
kinds of genes and that each can mutate in different ways – in nature,
mutations provide the raw material for evolution.
• Visible mutations – mutations that alter some aspect of morphology. Most
visible mutations are recessive but a few are dominant.
• Sterile mutations – mutations that limit reproduction. Some sterile
mutations affect both sexes, but most affect either males or females.
Mutations can be either recessive (impair reproduction slightly) or dominant
(impair reproduction completely).
• Lethal mutations – mutations that interfere with necessary vital functions.
Effect: death.
• Dominant lethals that act early in life are lost one generation after they
occur because the individuals that carry them die. However, dominant
lethals that act later in life, after reproduction, can be passed on the next
generation.
• Recessive lethals may linger a long time in a population because they can
be hidden in heterozygous condition by a wild-type allele – can be detected
by observing unusual segregation ratio in the progeny heterozygous
carriers.
• If the lethal effect is dominant and immediate in expression, all individuals carrying
the gene will die and the gene will be lost.
• Some dominant lethals, however, have a delayed effects so that the organism lives
for a time.
• Recessive lethals carried in the heterozygous condition have no effect but may
come to expression when matings between carriers occur.
• Dominant gene can only be inherited if the effect of the gene is shown after
fertilisation.
• Eg. Human; Huntington disease – show the effect in adult individual, nerve
degeneration occur, physical and mental retardation until they die.
A dominant visible mutation –
causes fur to be yellow instead of
gray-brown (the color, also known
as agouti, which is determined by
the allele Ay).
However, the AY mutation is a
recessive lethal, killing AYAY
homozygotes early in their
development.
A cross between AYAy
heterozygotes produces two kinds
of viable progeny: yellow (AYAy)
and gray-brown (AyAy) in a ratio of
2:1. – different from the 3:1 ratio
that would be obtained if AY were
simply a dominant visible
mutation.
Y, the yellow-lethal mutation in mice: a dominant visible that is also a recessive lethal.
• Eg. Lethal recessive kills –at embryo stage – yellow mouse.
- Cross between yellow mouse with another yellow mouse produces yellow
and grey F1 with the ratio of 2:1
Yellow Yellow
P Yy x Yy
- Allele Y has two characteristics – act as dominant allele for yellow colour.
- recessive allele for lethal.
- Therefore, all F1 progeny that has YY genotype die at embriyo stage and
ratio between yellow and grey is 2:1.
Genes Function to Produce Polypeptides
1. The environment
➢ A gene must function in the context of both a biological and a
physical environment. The physical environment can affect a
gene’s function.
➢ E.g: Drosophila mutation known as shibire – Japanese word for
“paralysis”. At normal culturing temperature (25C) – shibire flies
are viable and fertile, but are extremely sensitive to sudden shock.
When a shibire culture is shaken, the flies, temporarily paralyzed,
fall to the bottom of the culture. At slightly higher temperature
(29C) – all the flies fall to the bottom and die, even without a
shock. - At 25C, the mutation is viable but at 29C it is lethal →
the phenotype of the shibire mutation is temperature-sensitive.
➢ Plausible explanation: At 25C the mutant gene makes a partially
functional protein but at 29C, this protein is totally non-functional.
2. Penetrance and Expressivity (Genetic background)
➢ When individuals do not show a trait even though they
have the appropriate genotype, the trait is said to exhibit
incomplete penetrance.
➢ E.g: polydactyly – the presence of extra fingers and toes
in human. – due to a dominant mutation that is
manifested in some of its carriers.
➢ Due to a dominant mutation, P, that is manifested in
some of its carriers.
➢ Incomplete penetrance can be a serious problem in
pedigree analysis because it can lead to incorrect
assignment of genotype.
➢ Expressivity – is used if a trait is not manifested uniformly
among the individuals that show it.
➢ E.g: The dominant Lobe eye mutation in Drosophila. The
phenotype associated with this mutation is extremely variable.
➢ Some heterozygous flies have tiny compound eyes,
whereas others have large, lobulated eyes; between these
extremes, there is a full range of phenotypes.
➢ The Lobe mutation is therefore said to have variable
expressivity.
F1 = Walnut
• Eg. Dihybrid cross with complete dominance at both pairs of gene, but the gene
interaction between both dominance genes will produce the new phenotype.
• Explanation:
Gene A – determine yellowish colour, dominant to allele a (white).
Gene B – also determine yellowish colour, dominant to allele b (white)
Gene interaction between A and B genes – produce red colour
AA BB x aa bb
red white
F1 Aa Bb
red
F2: genotype phenotype
9 A_ B_ Red (gene interactions A & B) 9
3 A_ bb Yellowish (because of A) } =6
3 aa B_ Yellowish (because of B) }
1 aa bb White (because no A & B) 1
4. Epistasis
• When 2 or more alleles influence a trait, an allele of one of
them may have an overriding effect on the phenotype - known
as epistasis.
• E.g. mutations determining Drosophila eye colour.
cinnabar white
X
bright red eye white eye
cinnabar,white
white eye
overrides
white mutation is epistatic to
white cinnabar cinnabar mutation.
• Epistasis : a type of gene interaction which involve masking of a gene
expression (A/a) by another gene (B/b) which is nonallelic gene. (Any gene
that masks the expression of another, nonallelic gene is epistatic to that
gene).
Ratio 9:3:4
CC aa x cc AA
Black Albino
F1 Cc Aa
Grey
Self-cross between F1 – produce F2 with ratio:
Genotype Phenotype
9 C_ A_ Grey 9
3 C_ aa Black 3
3 cc A_ Albino}
1 cc aa Albino} 4
AA BB x aa bb
white green
F1 Aa Bb
white
F2 (F1 x F1):
Genotype Phenotype
9 A_ B_ White} 12
3 A_ bb White}
3 aa B_ Yellow 3
1 aa bb Green 1
• Gene B – bring yellow colour and dominant to gene b (bring green colour).
• The expression of gene B in A_ B_ class and expression of bb in A_bb
class is masked by gene A.
• B and bb in aa B_ class and aa bb can express their phenotypes (because
there is no gene A).
Students should be able to: