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bio 207 lab

what packages DNA

chromosomes

how is DNA packages in chromsomes

can be tight or loose, dna is wrapped around histone proteins (loose packaging) all the way to a highly condensed chromsome (tight packaging)

when is loose packaging required

for DNA replication and DNA transcription

what is high level packaging used for

transmission of DNA into new cells (mitosis or meiosis)

what is the basic structure of eukaryotic chromsome

linear DNA molecule wrapped around various proteins

what is the end of a chromsome called? what about the region between these ends?

telomere and centromere

what is unique about the centromere

contains DNA that is packaged tightly and is identifiable as a constriction point on the metaphase chromosome

are centromeres always in the same place on a chromsome

no it varies, creating 3 different types of chromsomes

metacentric chromsome has

a centromere located exaclty between the telomeres

acrocentric chromsome has

a centromere located closer to one of the telomeres

telocentric chromosome has

a centromere literally right by the telomere hence the name

how else can we distinguish between eukaryotic chromsomes

their size

how does size vary between chromsomes

the amount of DNA (measured in base pairs) determines the chromsomes size (larger--> more DNA). no terminology used to classify this, size is relative

how do gametes and somatic cells differ

gametes are egg and sperm cells they are haploid (n) whereass somatic cells are body cells and they are diploid (2n)

pairs of the same chromosome in diploid cells are called

homologous chromosomes

what is a genome

all the genes present in a gamete

the C-value (c) is

the measure of the amount of DNA in a genome, it is expressed in units of mass (ug) or length(bp)

c value of haploid vs diploid (generic convention)

haploid: 1 , diploid: 2

karyogram

displays the chromosomes of a cell, typically the chromosomes are in metaphase arranged into groups based on their size and centromere postion.

what is the cell cycle process

where cells alternate between a growth phae (interphase) and dividing phases (mitosis and cytokinesis) to produce two new daughter cells.

does every cell have the same frequency of divison

no it is highly variable

can the growth phase and the dividing phase of a cell occur simulatenously

no, because during thr growth phase (transcription) the chromsome needs to be packaged loosley where as for the dividing phase (mitosisi) it needs to be packaged tightly. Also becuase the cell needs to store enough energy and make material for cell divison

what are the 3 phases of interphase

gap 1 (G1) phase, s-phase, gap 2 (G2) phase

what is the gist of interphase

the time during th ecell cycle where cells preform designated functions, mainaitn structural and metabolic functions, prepare to divide. makes several proteins to prepare for replication

what happens during G1

when the previous round of cell divison ends G1 begins, it performs cell specfic duties and builds new cellular components, DNA IS NOT MADE DURING THIS PHASE>

what happens during the s phase

it starts after G1 when DNA packaged as chromosomes begin to replicate. by the end of the s phase the single piece of DNA started with in each chromosome becomes replicated consiting of two identical DNA moleculues.

what are the two identical DNA molcules made in the s phase called

sister chromatids. these sister chromatids are held together by proteins located at the centromere throughout interphase and most of cell division

after the s phase is the G2 phase, what happens here

the cell carries on with cell specific duties/building cell stuff and also prepares for cell division (mitosis)

how does mitosis differ from cytokinesis

mitosis: division of the nucleus

cytokinesis: division of the CYTO plasm

after interphase we proceed to mitosis what happens here

mitosis consists of 4 stafes which contribute to the equal division of the nuclues of one cell into genetically identical daughter cells

we start mitosi with prophase what happens here (6)

this stage marks the beginning of mitosis.

Chromatin Condenses: Chromosomes become visible.

Nucleolus Disappears: Nucleolus fades.

Mitotic Spindle Forms: Microtubules form spindle apparatus.

Centrosomes Move: Move to opposite poles.

Asters Form: Star-shaped structures around centrosomes.

Nuclear Envelope Breaks Down: Prepares for chromosome alignment.

then metaphase (3)

Chromosomes Align: Chromosomes line up at the cell’s equator (metaphase plate- a location not a phsyical structure ). indepdent movement of chromosomes
Spindle Fibers Attach: Spindle fibers (microtubules) connect to the centromeres of chromosomes to pull then to the middle of cell.

Chromosomes Are Fully Condensed: Chromosomes are fully visible and tightly packed.

anaphase

microtubules contract and pull the sister chromatids of each replicated chromosome to opposite poles. chromatids gain the status of chromosomes as soon as they segregate from their sister

telophase

nuclear membrane reforms around chromsomes at each pole, chromsomes became less condesened/ more loosely packaged, results in two genetically equal nuclei- contain the same number/types of chromosomes. at the end of cytokineisis these become two cells

what is crossing over

The pairing of homologous chromosomes helps set up specific processes that allow genetic material to be exchanged between the non-sister chromatids in each chromosome pair.

what does crossing over produce

increased genetic variation, 4 chromatids containing different allelic combinations compared to each other and compared to the chromosomes from which they originated

what is intrachromosomal recombination

the shuffling of genetic material between homologous chromosomes which occurs during crossing over

which prophase takes the longest time to complete

prophase I because of the extra time it takes homologous chromosomes to pair and for crossovers to occur.

prophase I

Chromosome condensation: Chromosomes become visible as thickened structures.

Synapsis: Homologous chromosomes pair up to form tetrads (groups of four chromatids).


Crossing over: Homologous chromosomes exchange genetic material at the chiasmata, increasing genetic diversity.


Formation of the synaptonemal complex: A protein structure that helps align homologous chromosomes.


Nuclear envelope breakdown: The nuclear membrane dissolves, allowing chromosomes to move freely.


Outcome: Formation of tetrads, genetic recombination, and preparation for the next stages of meiosis.

metaphase I

Chromosome alignment: Homologous chromosomes (tetrads) align along the metaphase plate.

Independent assortment: The orientation of each homologous pair is random, leading to genetic variation.


Spindle attachment: Spindle fibers attach to the centromeres of each homologous chromosome.


Outcome: Homologous chromosomes are positioned for separation in the next stage (Anaphase I). Genetic diversity is increased due to independent assortment.

indepedent assortment

indepedent and random oreintation of each bivalent creating genetic difference between gametes

genetic variation caused by independent assortment is reffered to as

interchromosomal recombination

anaphase I

Separation of homologous chromosomes: The spindle fibers shorten, pulling each homologous chromosome to opposite poles of the cell.

Chromatids remain attached: Unlike in mitosis, the sister chromatids of each chromosome remain attached at this stage.


Disjunction: The homologous chromosomes are randomly distributed to each daughter cell.


Outcome: Homologous chromosomes are separated into two distinct groups, reducing the chromosome number by half in preparation for meiosis II.

telophase I

Chromosomes reach poles: The separated homologous chromosomes arrive at opposite poles of the cell.

Nuclear envelope reformation: A new nuclear membrane forms around each set of chromosomes.


Chromosomes may de-condense: In some cells, chromosomes may begin to uncoil slightly.


Cytokinesis: The cytoplasm divides, resulting in two non-identical daughter cells, each with half the original chromosome number.


Outcome: Two haploid daughter cells are formed, each with one set of chromosomes, preparing for meiosis II.

what are the 4 differences betwen mitosis and meiosis I

chromosome number, number of divisions, homolgous chromosome pairing, genetic variation, purpose

mitosis vs meiosis I: chromosome number

Meiosis I: Reduces chromosome number by half (haploid).
Mitosis: Maintains chromosome number (diploid).

mitosis vs meiosis I: number of divisions

Meiosis I: One division, results in two haploid cells.
Mitosis: One division, results in two diploid cells.

mitosis vs meiosis I: homologous chromosome pairing

Meiosis I: Homologous chromosomes pair and cross over.
Mitosis: No pairing or crossing over.

mitosis vs meiosis I: genetic variation

Meiosis I: Homologous chromosomes pair and cross over.
Mitosis: No pairing or crossing over.

mitosis vs meiosis I: purpose/outcome

Meiosis I: Produces gametes for reproduction. 2 non identical, haploid cells

Mitosis: Used for growth, repair, and asexual reproduction. 2 identical diploid cells.

meiosis II. defintion, key events, outcome

definition: second divison f meiosis, where sister chromatids are sepearted, resulting in four non identical haploid cells

key events: similar to mitosis, but starts with haploid cells


outcome: four genetically diverse haploid daughter cells (gametes)

prophase II

Chromosomes condense: Chromosomes become visible again.

Nuclear envelope dissolves: The nuclear membrane breaks down.


Spindle fibers form: Spindle apparatus begins to form in each haploid cell.


Outcome: Chromosomes are prepared for alignment in Metaphase II.

metaphase II

Key Events:
Chromosomes align: Chromosomes line up along the metaphase plate.


Spindle attachment: Spindle fibers attach to the centromeres of each chromosome.


Outcome: Chromosomes are positioned for separation in Anaphase II.

anaphase II

Key Events:
Sister chromatids separate: The centromeres divide, and sister chromatids are pulled to opposite poles.


Spindle fibers shorten: The chromosomes move toward opposite ends of the cell.


Outcome: Sister chromatids are separated, becoming individual chromosomes.

telophase II

Chromosomes reach poles: The separated chromosomes arrive at opposite poles.

Nuclear envelope reforms: New nuclear membranes form around the chromosomes.


Cytokinesis: The cytoplasm divides, resulting in four non-identical haploid cells.


Outcome: Four genetically diverse haploid daughter cells, each with half the original chromosome number.

meiosis I vs meiosis II

Meiosis I: Reduces chromosome number, includes homologous chromosome separation, and crossing over.

Meiosis II: Separates sister chromatids, results in four haploid cells, no chromosome number reduction.

what are precursors used for

microoragnissm may obtain an organic compound they require from the environment or synthesize it from simple nutrients, these simple nutrients are precursors

what is the process of syntehsis of precursors

precursor--> intermediate--> organic compound (end product)

what is this series of chemical reactions called

the biosynthetic pathway, each pathway has several steps (steps faciliated by specific enzyme or protein) and each cell has many different pathways (serves to produce different productions for different functions)

who proposed the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis in 1941

beadle and tatum

what is the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis

each step in a biochemical pathway is catalyzed by an enzyme most enzymes are made of polypeptides (chain of aa that may/maynot function as an enzyme on their own), and each polypeptide is encoded by a gene

if the enzyme is consisted of a single polypeptide what is it called

a monomer

a homodimer

enzyme that contains two copies of the polypeptide

what is the complication of beadle and tatums hypothesis

some enzmes conssits of two different polypeptide, such that each polypepetide is encoded by different genes

what is a heterodimer

enzymes that consists of two different polypeptides

does a single gene stiill encode a single polypeptide in heterodimers

yes

cm (complete media)

cm: contain all the organic and in organic molecules required by an organism to grow, including the end products of biosynthetic ex. LB (lysogeny broth)

(mm) minimial media

contain only a carbon source, an energy source, and salts, the most basic nutrients required for a micororganism to grow

defined vs complex medium

defined: every chmeical and its amount is known

complex: undefined, contain compoenents that cannot be precisley measured, the lab used this because it is easier and cheaper

what do organissms need to do in mm

must synthesize all complex organic compounds that they need using many different biosynthetic pathways

wild type and prototrophic organism

has all the genes present to encode their enzymes so they can function properly (can grow in the wild). prototrophic means they can grow on mm and CM.

what is a mutated version of gene called

a mutant allele, where alleles refer to different forms of a gene this constracts with the orignal/wild type allele

what happens with the cells with the mutant allele

they can either not make a protein or make a dysfunctional protein

what is a detrimental about having a mutant allele

the cell cannot grow since the biosynthetic pathway is blocked, the reactions in the pathway can only proceed to the point of the blocked step

auxotrophs

microorganism that carry this muation and are unable to grow on MM since the pathway that is blocked leads to product essential for growth

auxotrophic cells can only grow on

CM

how can we identify the blocked steps in a biosynthesis pathway

through a biochemical pathway analysis

breif explanation of a biochemical pathway analysis

1. grow unknown auxotrophic strain on MM supplemented with various organic molecules that occur within the biosyntheic pathway

2. if the auxotroph cannot grow on a MM plate + a specific intermediate then the blocked step is downstream of that particular intermediate


hence if you add it C and it can grow the end product that means the function from C--> D is working so the blockage is upstream but if you add C and it doesnt grow the function from C-->D is not working

an auxotrophic is placed on a MM + glucose plate and MM+ glucose-6-Phosphate plate which is the procceeding intermediate of the serine biosyntehtic pathway. the strain only grows on the MM+glucose-6-phopshate plate. where is the blcokage

there is a blocked step at the conversion of glucose to glucose-6-phosphate probably because the enzyme responsible for this conversion is likely deficient or nonfunctional due to a mutation in the gene that encodes this enzyme

how can we conclusively determine which gene is mutant in an auxotroph?

a transformation resuce experiment

transformation r

systematically providing an auxotrophic strain with wild type alleles of the genes known to function in the relevant biosyntheic pathway using genetically engineered plasmids (small self replicating cirlce of DNA that occur naturally in e.coli) and contain genes otuside of the main chromosome. the gnees in question can be inserted into the ecoli using transformation

transformation resuce experiment gist

inserting one type of plasmid with that wildtype allele of one of the genes in question, growing those transfromed cells on an MM plate and looking for growth. if the cell grows on the mm plate they have been rescued since they have been given the wil type allel of the gene in which their mutation occurs and now can make all enzymes needed. if it cant grow on the mm the wild type allele of a gene recieved is different that the gene that is muated hence still have a defcient enzyme

proceed to. asecond transformation usign a wild type alle of a different gene till a rescue occurs

how are dna fragments generated

by digesting larger dna molecules with restriction endonucleases (restriction enzymes

are all restrction enzymes the same

no theres different ones which recognize different specific sequences of DNA and cuts the DNA at only that sequence

how can the dna fragments be reconnected

using the enzyme DNA ligase that joins.ligates the dna fragments together potentiall in new unique pairings

restriction enzyme cuts where

cuts the sugar phosphate backbones of DNA at a specific sequence- the restriction endonucleases recongition site

dna ligase

joins the sugar phosphate backbone of DNA

what is similar about restriction enzymes and DNA ligase

both are heat sensitive (beging to denature at room temp)

has optimal conditons (pH, salt conc etc.) for effectiveness the correct buffer must be used

why do we make dna fragments

these fragments typically contain genes which are usually the target of DNA manipulations.

to manipulate genes they need to be isolated and then copied numerous times, how is this done

inserting the restriction fragment containing the target gene into a palsmid, which is a small, circular DNA molecule capable of replicating inside a bacterial cell

explain cloning

isolate gene--> incorportaing it into a plasmid--> insert plasmid into bacterial cell (for replication)--> increases the # of copies of the gene the organism contains

how does subcloning differ

sub cloning simply consists of moving a piece of DNA from one plasmid (vector to vector), it is not isolated from a novel source like regular cloning

sticky ends are what

overhanding single stranded regions at the ends of DNA molecule after it has been cut by certain restriction enzymes, they can stick to other dna mocleule that was cut with the same restriction enzyme

where is the lac Z gene from

orignally siolated from wild type Ecoli, it is the first gene in the lac operon

what protein does the LacZ encode

the protein B-galactosidase, which is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydolytic cleavage of lactose into glucose and galactose

what does the protein b-galactosidase do which marks its prescence physically

it also cleaves the colourless substrate X-gal which is a chemical analouge of lactose to form an insoluble blue coloured product.

say you add X gal to an agar plate how can we detect B-galactosidase is present

blue colony--> B-g is present and functional

white colony-> B-g absent

B-galactosidase can be seperated into two polypeptide parts what are they

a-fragment (alpha fragment) the smaller fragment

w-fragment (omegae fragment) the larger fragment


they can both be encoded seperately

what encodes the alpha fragment of b-g

a small part of the lacZ called LacZ' (lac Z primer) that is niether the enitre lac operon nore the entire lac Z gene, only the promoter and the first part of the coding region of lac Z ( has the N terminal (amino group at the end NH2)) not active by it seld

what encodes the omega fragments of b-g

only uses the last part of the LacZ as the coding region, the lacZ' part is deleted. also not active by itseld and contain the c terminal (carboxyl group COOH)

when is there only an active b-galactosidase enzyme

if both of these genes are brought together in the same cell, their repsetic epolypetide products (alphas/omega frgaments) can form ana active enzyme

alpha complementation

coming together on alpha and omega fragments to make a functional enzyme, used in DNA manipulation to determine if a piece of DNA was inserted into a plasmid

can the b-galactosidase enzyme still be functional if the fragments/genes are on diferent DNA molecules

yes their expression into the same cell at the end allows them to reassembel into an active enzyme since they are complementary

where is the lux operon from

it is a contingous sequence of genes from the MJ1 strain of Vibrio fischeri a bilouminsect bacterial species that lives in the 'light organs' of the japanese pinecone fish

why is the lux operon important

all genetic information to show the phenotype of bioluminescnce (glowing in the dark) is present withing the lux operon

the operon contains what two main genes that encode what subunits of what enzyme

the luxA encodes alpha subunit and the lux B that encode the beta subunit of the enzyme luciferase

luciferase

this enzyme catalyzes a reaction that produces a blue green light so bioluminescence

the lux operon contains five other genes (C, D, E, I and R) that encode other enzymes what do these do

C,D,E encode enzymes involved in the synthesis of the major reactant in the reaction

I and R are regulatory genes that control the expression of the lux operon genes

what is a double digest

digesting a plasmid with two different restriction enzymes to generate restriction fragments that have different restriction cut sizes at each end, these fragments cannot recirculaize

why double digest

- precise cutting, fragment size selection, directional cloning
- Enhances the production of recombinant molecules because the likelihood of original plasmid reforming is reduced and the probability of individual restriction fragments circularizing is eliminated meaning

double digest is on of the procedures for sucessful subclonig what are the two others?

antibiotic slection and blue/white screening

antibiotic selection is what

using an antibiotic senstive e.coli strain transform it with a plasmid containing antiobiotic resitance gene and plate it on a medium containing the antibiotic.

how do you know the transformation is succefsul antiobiotic selection.

cells that were transformed will grow on the medium

blue/white screening is what

takes advantage of alpha complementation by seeing if cell have incorported a piece of their DNA into the target plasmid (could or coukld not be the target gene/restriction fragment) we would be able to see this becuase it would disrupt the interaction in the lacZ gene between alpha and omega fragments

what would we see if the piece of DNA is inserted

the cells would be white since the inserted piece disrupts the Lacz' which disrupts alpha complemnattion--> not functional b-galactosidase means no blue colour

what would blue cell show

that they contain the plasmid vector we desire but do not have a piece of DNA incorporated into it

many genes are engineered such that they can be effectively used for for cloning/subcloning, what is an example of this

pBS (pBLuescript) created by stratagene is 1989

what is the features of pBS that make it useful (4)

1. has an ori (origin of replication), allows it to replicate in host
2. carries betalactamase gne (Amp^R) which is a selectable makrer by providing resitance to ampicillin

3. has the lac Z' gene which encodes the alpha fragment of B-g

4. has a multiple cloning site (MCS) located within the lacZ' gene. this MCS contains unique restriction enzyme sites that are useful for cloning restriction fragments

what is Pcam^R-lux

the plasmid that contains the lux operon

Pcam^R-lux useful features (4)

1. 9000 bp restriction frgament that contains lux operon
2. has an ori (origin of replication) that enables the plasmid to replicate

3. carries chloramphenicol acteyltransferase gene (Cam^R). this is a selectebale marker, gives resistance to chlormphenicol

4. has atleast 3 restriction enzyme sites (sal I, Bam HI, and KPN I) which are not present within the lux operon and are therefore useful in subcloning the lux operon

simialr to using useful plasmid theres also useful strains of e.coli what is an example ? what are the 3 useful features?

DH5a (alpha)
1. recombination defcient (ensures plasmid stays in its orginal form instead of being intergrated into the bacteria chromosome), lacks the endonuclease ( prevents degradation/unwanted cutting) but retains the methylase (bacterial DNA is protected but plasmid DNA can be cut by restriction enzymes) both properties make the strain useful in the cloning procdure


2. senstive to ampicillin and chlormphenicol



3. has necessary genetic information encoding a omega fragment but lacks the normal lac operon- doesnt have the full set for a complentation (important for blue white screening)

gel electropheresis seprates fragments of DNA based on lenght, what moves through the gel amtric faster

larger fragments stay closer to the negative side and are slower where as smaller fragments move to the postive side faster

how does the fruit fly drosophila mealnogaster reproduce

it is a sexually reproducing organism

how are humans and fruit flies simalr

the cells of females have four pairs of chromosomes with one of these pairs consisting of two X chromosomes and the cells of males also have four pair of chromsomes but the pair that makes up the sex chromsomes is XY which is superfically simalr to humans although the mechanism of sex determination is different

what is imporant about naming gene symbols for alleles

the letter used in the symbol correlated with the recessive muatant allele

how is the set of chromosomes in a cell of specicies defined

it is species species and characterized by a karyotype that conssits of a constant number of chromosomes each of which is distinct in morphology, size, genetic (DNA) content

diploid species

have two copies of each kind of chromsomes, these copies are called homolgous chromosomes

in 1902 two years after the rediscovery of mendels findings, what was postulated

sutton and boveri postulated that there were parallels between the behaviour organisms chromsomes and that of 'mendels factors' - units of heredity- which were called genes by johanssen in 1909

what did the parallele behaviour let them conclude

that genes are located on chromosomes and the units of heredity that are located at corresponding postions on each homologous chromosomes are reffered to as alleles

in 1865 gregor mendel examined what

the inhetrance of a few traits in the garden pea, P.sativum. he concerned himself with identifying and categorizing the phenotypes that were expressed by the plants in the F1 and the F2 generation of different monohybrid crosses

phenotype

physical, physiological, behavioural characteristic of an organism determined by the genetic makeup, genotype of the organism and its environment.

monohybrid cross

genetic crosses between individuals that are true breeding for different phenotypes of a single trait, and true breeding indivduals produce offspring that have the same characters as they have.

what did mendel osberve in the F1? what did he attribute this observation to

that the indivduals of the F1 always resembled the phenotype of one true breeding parent and not the other. he attributed this to the presence of a dominant factor and recessive factor

what do we call this observation now

complete dominance

what did he examine in the F2

that 3/4 of the indivuals in the F2 generation exhibited the dominant phenotype while the recessive phenotype appeared in appeared 1/4

what did mendel postulate after these observations

that the phenotypes were determined by genetic factors that existed in pairs. this was based on the sepration of genetic factos (segregatin of alleles which are located on chromosomes during meiosis) followed by a random fusion (fertilization of gametes), and a principle he called dominance

what are mendels factors called now

genes and alternate forms of these factors are called alleles

after several other similar findings in different organisms, mendesl observations were known as

the law of segration: two alles of agene in a diploid organism are partitioned randomly into the gametes such that each gamete will contain only one copy of the gene folllowing the completeion of meiosis

sexually dimorphic

the biological sexes are phsyically different at some level, sex determination often depends on a chromosomal difference between the sexes and is usaully represented by a morphological difference between the two chromosomes that make up one of the pairs

chromosomes that arent sex determining are called? the genes on these are called

autosome, autosmal genes instead of sex linked genes

homogamaetic ve heterogametic

homogametic: contains two morphologically similar sex chromosomes XX

heterogametic: contains one copy of the sex chromosoems found in the homogametic sex and one copy of another morphologically different sex chromosome. XY

numerous variations of this theme exist however the most common variation is that....

homogametic sex is female XX

heterogametic sex is male XY

is an XY system how are autsomes given to kids

males and females recevie one autosome of each pair of autosomes from each parents

in the X/Y system how are the sex chromosomes passed to offsrping

for females one x chromosome is from mom and one from dad and for males the x chromosome is from the mom and the y is from the dad

what genes does the y chromosome typically carry? gie an ex

genes that are only important to the differentiation of its sexual form

example: the Y chromosome in drospholia carries male fertility genes, the one in humans carries gene needed to initiate male development

how does the x chromosome contrast

the x chromosome since it is present in both sexes carries a substantial number of genes essential to both sexes.

what is hemizygous

since only one copy (or allele) of each these essential genes is present in the heterogametic sex it is said they are hemizygous (only one copy) for those genes and alleles of these genes will be expressed

how is the sexual form of offspring determined

basically during meiosis the hetergametic sex (male), the x and y chromosomes he has behave as homolgous chromsomes for the purpose of segregation. as a result two kinds of gametes are generated in equal proportions one contains a set of autsomes with the X and one is a set of autosomes with Y . the sex of the offspring is determined primarily by which sex chromosome is present in the gamete that is receives from the heterogametic (male) parent

what does this equal proportions of segregation allow

that in large populations of indiviuals one should expect to observe males and females in equal proportions

although segregation during meiosis is characterisitc of the majority of genes and alleles in most sexually dimoprhic species, the observations described by medel are characterstic of genes located on?

autosomes, and the patterns of autosomal inheritance. In sexually dimorphic species the iheritance of sex linked genes deviates from the pattern described by mendel

how many genes of drosphollia are sex linked ? how can their pattern of inheritance be determined?

approx 20% of genes are located on x chromsome. their pattern of inheritance can be determined through controlled crosses (ones in which the phenotypes of the parents are selected by the experimenter and the parents are trubreeding (p1)

uppercase, + mean

dominant. where as recessive is lowercase -

reciprocal crosses

the phenotypes of the male and female are switched between these two crosses

if the results of the reciprocal crosses differ what does tht mean

the gene is likely sex linked

if the the phenotypetypes of males and females differ within one of the crosses what does that mean

the gene is likely sex linked

if you test stat is lower than the crtical value what does that mean

If the test statistic is lower than the critical value, you do not have enough evidence to reject the null hypothesis, so you "fail to reject" it. follows the punnet expected. sum (O-E)^2/E

the human genome consists mostly of sequences that are non coding, what is unique about these sequences

these sequences are not subject to direct selective evolutionary pressures becuase they do not code for protein or rna molecule, thus they frequently vary between indiviuals

DNA polymorphism

variations in sequence of non coding DNA that can be used as molecular markers to map the genome.

parts of these variations in sequence can involve base substitutions whihc can produce which two types of polymorphisms

restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLPs) or sinlge nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)

in our lab the variation ins equence is not due to a base change but due to

the insertion of a specific transposable element (a piece of DNA that can move around in a genome) called Alu (300 bp) derives its name from the prescence of Alu I restriction enzyme site within the transposable elements sequence

over a million Alu transposable elements are interspersed throughout the human genome and those Alu elements make up approx 11% of the human genome, what is unique about the location of Alu

at most places where Alu is located the element is 'fixed in the population'. that is, all individuals have the Alu sequence at that site, hwoever since afew of these transposable elements are still mobile and can thus move into new postions in the genome (rare), some postions with an Alu insertion are not fixed in the population

for the Alu that are not fixed in the population what is important about their postion

those positions have two or more allelic forms, in other words at some genomic positions one allele has Alu while the other does not. thus some indivuals are homozygous for the allele that has Alu some are homo for the allele without Alu and othere heterozygous and have both alleles

what can the insertion of alu into a protein cause

the insetion of Alu into a protein coding region of a gene can cause a mutation

PV 92

name of the genomic postion, a region on chromosome 16 that is not part of any gene so not associated with any specific phenotype but alleles at this location differ with respect to the presence of Alu (one allele-731) contain Alu while the other (416) doesn't

how would u determine the presence, absence or heterozygoisty of alu

in gel electrophoresis
713/713 - presence would be a longer band

416/416- lacks would be a shorter band

731/416- 2 bands

what is the basic process of detected the alu at PV 92

start with PCR< forward and reverse primers bind to sequences located on iether side of Alu, this produced a dna product of different lengths for each allele. for the allele without the insert only the DNA sequence between the two primers will be amplified giving a short product of 416 bp for the alle containing the dna sequence between the primers plus Alu (300bp) will be amplieifed to give the longer product of 731bp. in heterzygous indivuals both the 731 and 416 bp product will be amplified

allele frequency

measure of the occurence of an allele expressed as a proportion in a popualtion. p+q=1 and P2 + 2pq + q2 =1

random mating

every male has equal oppurnutiy to mate with ever female

assortative mating

specific genotypes mate preferntially with other genotypes (selective)

if observed=expected then

indivuals come from a population where mating is random

5 conditons of H-W eqbrm

No Mutation: There are no new mutations that create new alleles or alter the frequencies of existing alleles.

Random Mating: Mating occurs randomly, meaning that individuals do not prefer mates with specific genotypes.


No Natural Selection: All individuals in the population have an equal chance of survival and reproduction, regardless of their genotype.


Large Population Size: The population must be large enough to prevent genetic drift (random changes in allele frequencies that are more likely in small populations).


No Gene Flow (Migration): There is no movement of individuals into or out of the population that could introduce new alleles or change allele frequencies.

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