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Principles of Inheritance and Variation

The document discusses the historical development of genetics, focusing on Mendel's laws of inheritance and the contributions of key figures like Watson and Crick in understanding DNA structure. It covers principles of inheritance, including monohybrid and dihybrid crosses, and introduces concepts such as dominance, segregation, and independent assortment. Additionally, it highlights the significance of molecular biology and the evolution of genetic understanding through advancements in research and technology.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
7 views

Principles of Inheritance and Variation

The document discusses the historical development of genetics, focusing on Mendel's laws of inheritance and the contributions of key figures like Watson and Crick in understanding DNA structure. It covers principles of inheritance, including monohybrid and dihybrid crosses, and introduces concepts such as dominance, segregation, and independent assortment. Additionally, it highlights the significance of molecular biology and the evolution of genetic understanding through advancements in research and technology.

Uploaded by

Tushar Shukla
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Introduction

●​ Mendel's work and that of his followers provided an understanding of inheritance


patterns.
●​ However, the nature of the 'factors' determining phenotype was unclear.
●​ Understanding the structure of genetic material and the basis of genotype-phenotype
conversion became a major focus in biology.
●​ This led to the development of molecular biology, with contributions from Watson, Crick,
Nirenberg, Khorana, the Kornbergs, Benzer, Monod, Brenner, etc..
●​ The mechanism of evolution was a parallel problem being addressed.
●​ Advances in molecular genetics, structural biology, and bioinformatics have enhanced
our understanding of the molecular basis of evolution.
●​ This unit examines the structure and function of DNA and the story and theory of
evolution.
●​ Chapters cover Principles of Inheritance and Variation (Chapter 4), Molecular Basis of
Inheritance (Chapter 5), and Evolution (Chapter 6).

James Watson and Francis Crick

●​ James Dewey Watson (born April 6, 1928) received a B.Sc. in Zoology in 1947 and a
Ph.D. in Zoology in 1950 for studying the effect of hard X-rays on bacteriophage
multiplication.
●​ His interest shifted from bird-watching to genetics.
●​ He met Crick, and they shared an interest in solving the structure of DNA.
●​ Their first attempt was unsuccessful.
●​ Their second effort, based on more experimental evidence and nucleic acid literature,
resulted in the proposal of the complementary double-helical configuration in early March
1953.
●​ Francis Harry Compton Crick (born June 8, 1916) obtained a B.Sc. in physics in 1937
and a Ph.D. in 1954 on X-ray Diffraction of Polypeptides and Proteins.
●​ His friendship with the younger Watson was a critical influence, leading to the 1953 DNA
structure proposal and replication scheme.
●​ Crick was made an F.R.S. in 1959.
●​ Honours to Watson and Crick include the John Collins Warren Prize (1959), Lasker
Award (1960), Research Corporation Prize (1962), and the Nobel Prize (1962).

Chapter 4: Principles of Inheritance and Variation

●​ Genetics is the branch of biology dealing with inheritance and variation of characters
from parents to offspring.
●​ Inheritance is the process of passing characters from parent to progeny and is the basis
of heredity.
●​ Variation is the degree by which progeny differ from their parents.
●​ Humans have known since 8000-1000 B.C. that sexual reproduction causes variation
and used selective breeding for desirable traits.
●​ Artificial selection and domestication, e.g., Sahiwal cows from wild cows, demonstrate
the application of this knowledge.
●​ However, ancestors had little scientific understanding of the basis of inheritance and
variation.

4.1 Mendel’s Laws of Inheritance

●​ Gregor Mendel conducted hybridization experiments on garden peas for seven years
(1856-1863).
●​ He proposed the laws of inheritance in living organisms.
●​ Mendel was the first to apply statistical analysis and mathematical logic to biological
problems.
●​ His experiments had a large sample size, increasing the credibility of his data.
●​ Confirmation of his inferences in successive generations supported the generality of his
rules.
●​ Mendel studied characters with two opposing traits (e.g., tall/dwarf, yellow/green seeds).
●​ This allowed him to establish a basic framework of inheritance rules, later expanded by
others.
●​ Mendel used artificial pollination/cross-pollination with true-breeding pea lines.
●​ A true-breeding line shows stable trait inheritance and expression after continuous
self-pollination.
●​ Mendel selected 14 true-breeding pea plant varieties with contrasting traits (e.g.,
smooth/wrinkled seeds, yellow/green seeds, inflated/constricted pods, tall/dwarf plants).

4.2 Inheritance of One Gene

●​ Mendel crossed tall and dwarf pea plants to study the inheritance of one gene
(monohybrid cross).
●​ The first hybrid generation (F₁) progeny were all tall, resembling one parent.
●​ The dwarf trait did not appear in the F₁ generation.
●​ Self-pollination of the tall F₁ plants resulted in some dwarf offspring (1/4th) in the Filial 2
(F₂) generation, with 3/4th being tall.
●​ The tall and dwarf traits in the F₂ were identical to the parental types, showing no
blending.
●​ Similar 3:1 ratios in F₂ were observed for other traits, with no blending in F₁ or F₂.
●​ Mendel proposed that 'factors' (now called genes) were stably passed down unchanged
through gametes.
●​ Genes are the units of inheritance and contain information for expressing a trait.
●​ Genes coding for contrasting traits are alleles (slightly different forms of the same gene).
●​ Alphabetical symbols are used for genes, with capital letters for dominant traits
(expressed in F₁) and lowercase for recessive traits.
●​ For height, T (tall) and t (dwarf) are alleles.
●​ Homozygous individuals have identical alleles (TT or tt), while heterozygous individuals
have dissimilar alleles (Tt).
●​ TT and tt represent the genotype, while tall and dwarf are the phenotype.
●​ The phenotype of the heterozygous Tt plant was tall, leading to the concept of
dominance.
●​ In a pair of dissimilar factors, one (dominant) masks the expression of the other
(recessive).
●​ T (tall) is dominant over t (dwarf).
●​ It's important to use consistent symbols (e.g., T and t, not T and d) to avoid confusion
about allelic relationships.
●​ Since the Tt plant is heterozygous for one character, the TT x tt cross is a monohybrid
cross.
●​ The reappearance of the recessive trait in F₂ without blending suggests that alleles
segregate during gamete formation (meiosis), with each gamete receiving only one
allele.
●​ Segregation of alleles is random, with a 50% chance for each allele in a gamete.
●​ Tall (TT) plants produce gametes with allele T, and dwarf (tt) plants produce gametes
with allele t.
●​ Fertilization unites one allele from each parent (e.g., T from pollen, t from egg), resulting
in heterozygous (Tt) zygotes.
●​ A Punnett Square, developed by Reginald C. Punnett, is a graphical representation to
calculate the probability of offspring genotypes in a genetic cross.
●​ It shows parental gametes on two sides and possible combinations in the squares.
●​ Self-pollination of F₁ (Tt) plants produces gametes T and t in equal proportion.
●​ Random fertilization leads to TT (1/4), Tt (1/2), and tt (1/4) genotypes in the F₂
generation.
●​ The phenotypic ratio in F₂ is 3/4 tall (TT and Tt) : 1/4 dwarf (tt), a 3:1 ratio.
●​ The genotypic ratio in F₂ is 1:2:1 (TT: Tt: tt).
●​ The genotypic ratio can be represented by the binomial expression (1/2T + 1/2t)² = 1/4
TT + 1/2Tt + 1/4 tt.
●​ Self-pollination of dwarf F₂ plants (tt) continued to produce only dwarf plants in
subsequent generations, indicating their homozygous genotype.
●​ The genotype of a tall plant (TT or Tt) cannot be determined solely by its phenotype.
●​ A test cross involves crossing an organism with a dominant phenotype (unknown
genotype) with a recessive parent to determine the genotype of the dominant phenotype
organism.
●​ The progeny of a test cross can reveal the genotype of the tested organism.

4.2.1 Law of Dominance

●​ Based on monohybrid crosses, Mendel proposed the Law of Dominance.


●​ (i) Characters are controlled by discrete units called factors (genes).
●​ (ii) Factors occur in pairs (alleles).
●​ (iii) In a dissimilar pair of factors, one (dominant) dominates the other (recessive).
●​ The Law of Dominance explains the expression of only one parental character in F₁ and
both in F₂, as well as the 3:1 phenotypic ratio in F₂.

4.2.2 Law of Segregation

●​ This law is based on the fact that alleles do not blend and both parental characters are
recovered in F₂, even if one wasn't seen in F₁.
●​ During gamete formation, the two alleles of a pair segregate, so each gamete receives
only one allele.
●​ A homozygous parent produces similar gametes, while a heterozygous parent produces
two types of gametes with equal proportions of each allele.

4.2.2.1 Incomplete Dominance

●​ In some cases, the F₁ phenotype is an intermediate between the two parents.


●​ Example: Flower color in snapdragons (Antirrhinum sp.).
●​ Cross between true-breeding red (RR) and white (rr) flowers produces pink (Rr) F₁
offspring.
●​ Self-pollination of F₁ (Rr) results in an F₂ ratio of 1 (RR) Red : 2 (Rr) Pink : 1 (rr) White.
●​ The genotypic ratio (1:2:1) is Mendelian, but the phenotypic ratio is different (1:2:1
instead of 3:1).
●​ In incomplete dominance, the dominant allele (R) is not completely dominant over the
recessive allele (r), allowing the heterozygote (Rr) to express an intermediate phenotype
(pink).
●​ Dominance depends on the gene product and the resulting phenotype.
●​ Genes contain information to express a particular trait.
●​ Diploid organisms have two copies (alleles) of each gene, which may be identical
(homozygous) or different (heterozygous).
●​ Alleles can differ due to changes (mutations) modifying the information they contain.
●​ Consider a gene producing an enzyme.
●​ A normal allele produces a functional enzyme for substrate conversion (S).
●​ A modified allele could produce: (i) normal/less efficient enzyme, (ii) non-functional
enzyme, or (iii) no enzyme.
●​ If the modified allele produces a normal/less efficient enzyme still capable of substrate
conversion, the phenotype remains the same (equivalent alleles).
●​ If the modified allele produces a non-functional or no enzyme, the phenotype may be
affected.
●​ The phenotype then depends on the functioning of the unmodified allele (dominant), and
the modified allele is generally recessive.
●​ The recessive trait is seen when the enzyme is non-functional or absent.

4.2.2.2 Co-dominance

●​ In co-dominance, the F₁ generation resembles both parents.


●​ Example: ABO blood grouping in humans, controlled by gene I with three alleles: Iᴬ, Iᴮ,
and i.
●​ Iᴬ and Iᴮ produce slightly different sugar forms on red blood cells, while i produces no
sugar.
●​ Humans are diploid, possessing any two of these three alleles.
●​ Iᴬ and Iᴮ are completely dominant over i (Iᴬi results in blood type A, Iᴮi results in blood
type B).
●​ When both Iᴬ and Iᴮ are present (IᴬIᴮ), both express their respective sugars, resulting in
blood type AB (co-dominance).
●​ There are six possible genotypes and four different phenotypes for ABO blood types.
●​ ABO blood grouping is also an example of multiple alleles (more than two alleles
governing the same character).
●​ Multiple alleles can only be observed in population studies, as an individual can only
possess two alleles.
●​ Pleiotropy: A single gene product may produce more than one effect.
●​ Example: Starch synthesis in pea seeds controlled by one gene with alleles B and b.
●​ BB homozygotes produce large starch grains (round seeds), bb homozygotes produce
smaller starch grains (wrinkled seeds), and Bb heterozygotes produce round seeds (B is
dominant for seed shape) but intermediate-sized starch grains (incomplete dominance
for starch grain size).
●​ Dominance is not an intrinsic property of a gene but depends on the gene product, the
phenotype examined, and whether the gene influences multiple phenotypes.

4.3 Inheritance of Two Genes

●​ Mendel also studied dihybrid crosses, involving pea plants differing in two characters
(e.g., seed color and shape).
●​ Cross between yellow round (RRYY) and green wrinkled (rryy) seeds produced F₁ with
yellow and round seeds (RrYy).
●​ Yellow color (Y) is dominant over green (y), and round shape (R) is dominant over
wrinkled (r).
●​ These dominance relationships were consistent with monohybrid crosses.
●​ Self-hybridization of F₁ (RrYy) resulted in F₂ with a 3:1 ratio for yellow:green and 3:1 for
round:wrinkled, similar to monohybrid crosses.

4.3.1 Law of Independent Assortment

●​ The F₂ phenotypic ratio in the dihybrid cross was 9 round yellow : 3 wrinkled yellow : 3
round green : 1 wrinkled green.
●​ This 9:3:3:1 ratio is a combination of the 3:1 ratios of the individual monohybrid crosses:
(3 Round : 1 Wrinkled) x (3 Yellow : 1 Green).
●​ Based on dihybrid crosses, Mendel proposed the Law of Independent Assortment.
●​ Law of Independent Assortment: When two pairs of traits are combined in a
hybrid, segregation of one pair of characters is independent of the other pair of
characters.
●​ The Punnett square can illustrate the independent segregation of two gene pairs during
meiosis and the production of gametes by the F₁ (RrYy) plant.
●​ Segregation of R and r (50% R, 50% r) is independent of the segregation of Y and y
(50% Y, 50% y).
●​ This results in four types of gametes: RY, Ry, rY, and ry, each with a frequency of 25%
(1/4th).
●​ The Punnett square for a dihybrid cross has 16 squares representing the possible
zygote genotypes in F₂.
●​ The F₂ genotypic ratio is not simply 9:3:3:1 and needs to be worked out from the Punnett
square.

4.3.2 Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance

●​ Mendel's work (1865) remained unrecognized until 1900 due to:


○​ Poor communication.
○​ His concept of discrete, non-blending genes was not accepted due to observed
continuous variation.
○​ His mathematical approach to biology was novel and unacceptable to many
biologists.
○​ Lack of physical proof for the existence of genes and their composition.
●​ In 1900, de Vries, Correns, and von Tschermak independently rediscovered Mendel's
results.
●​ Advancements in microscopy allowed scientists to observe chromosome behavior during
cell division.
●​ Chromosomes, nuclear structures that double and divide before cell division, were
discovered.
●​ By 1902, chromosome movement during meiosis was understood.
●​ Walter Sutton and Theodore Boveri noted the parallel behavior of chromosomes and
genes.
●​ They used chromosome movement to explain Mendel's laws.
●​ Chromosomes and genes occur in pairs.
●​ Alleles of a gene pair are located on homologous sites on homologous chromosomes.
●​ During Anaphase I of meiosis, chromosome pairs align independently at the metaphase
plate (independent assortment of chromosomes).
●​ Sutton and Boveri argued that the pairing and separation of chromosomes lead to the
segregation of the genes they carry.
●​ Sutton united chromosomal segregation with Mendelian principles, proposing the
chromosomal theory of inheritance.
●​ Experimental verification by Thomas Hunt Morgan and his colleagues on fruit flies
(Drosophila melanogaster) supported this theory and explained the basis of variation
from sexual reproduction.
●​ Drosophila were suitable due to easy lab growth, short life cycle (2 weeks), large
progeny, distinct sexes, and observable hereditary variations.

4.3.3 Linkage and Recombination


●​ Morgan performed dihybrid crosses in Drosophila with sex-linked genes.
●​ Example: Cross between yellow-bodied, white-eyed females and brown-bodied,
red-eyed males.
●​ The F₂ ratio deviated significantly from 9:3:3:1, indicating that the two genes did not
segregate independently.
●​ Morgan knew these genes were on the X chromosome.
●​ Genes on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together (linked), resulting in a
higher proportion of parental gene combinations in the F₂.
●​ Morgan coined the term linkage for the physical association of genes on a chromosome.
●​ Recombination describes the generation of non-parental gene combinations.
●​ Even linked genes showed some recombination, indicating that linkage was not always
complete.
●​ Tightly linked genes (low recombination frequency) and loosely linked genes (high
recombination frequency) were observed.
●​ Example: White and yellow genes (1.3% recombination, tightly linked), white and
miniature wing genes (37.2% recombination, loosely linked).
●​ Alfred Sturtevant, Morgan's student, used recombination frequency between gene pairs
to measure the distance between genes and create genetic maps of chromosomes.
●​ Genetic maps are used as a starting point for whole genome sequencing projects like
the Human Genome Sequencing Project.

4.4 Polygenic Inheritance

●​ Mendel's studies focused on traits with distinct alternate forms.


●​ Many traits show a continuous range of variation (gradient), e.g., human height.
●​ Such traits are typically controlled by three or more genes (polygenic traits) and are
influenced by the environment.
●​ Example: Human skin color, controlled by multiple genes (e.g., three genes A, B, C with
dominant alleles for dark skin and recessive for light skin).
●​ In polygenic inheritance, the phenotype reflects the additive contribution of each allele.
●​ Genotype AABBCC (all dominant) has the darkest skin, aabbcc (all recessive) has the
lightest skin, and intermediate genotypes have intermediate skin colors.

4.5 Pleiotropy

●​ Pleiotropy: A single gene can exhibit multiple phenotypic expressions.


●​ The underlying mechanism often involves the gene's effect on metabolic pathways
contributing to different phenotypes.
●​ Example: Phenylketonuria in humans, caused by a mutation in the gene for
phenylalanine hydroxylase (single gene mutation).
●​ This leads to phenotypic expressions including mental retardation and reduced hair and
skin pigmentation.

4.6 Sex Determination


●​ The mechanism of sex determination was initially puzzling.
●​ Early clues came from insect experiments and cytological observations.
●​ Henking (1891) observed a specific nuclear structure (X body) during spermatogenesis
in some insects, present in 50% of sperm.
●​ The X body was later identified as the X-chromosome.
●​ XO type sex determination in many insects: eggs have an X chromosome, some sperm
have X, some do not; XX zygotes (fertilized by X-sperm) develop into females, XO
zygotes (fertilized by sperm lacking X) develop into males.
●​ In XO type, males and females have unequal numbers of chromosomes.
●​ The X-chromosome is a sex chromosome, while others are autosomes.
●​ Grasshopper is an example of XO sex determination (males have one X, females have
two).
●​ XY type sex determination in other insects and mammals (including humans): both
sexes have the same number of chromosomes.
●​ Males have one X and a smaller Y chromosome; females have two X chromosomes.
●​ Both sexes have the same number of autosomes.
●​ Males: autosomes + XY; Females: autosomes + XX.
●​ Humans and Drosophila have XY males and XX females.
●​ XO and XY are examples of male heterogamety (males produce two types of gametes
regarding sex chromosomes).
●​ ZW type sex determination in birds: females produce two types of gametes (Z and W),
males produce one type (ZZ) - female heterogamety.
●​ Females have ZW chromosomes, males have ZZ chromosomes.

4.6.1 Sex Determination in Humans

●​ Humans have XY type sex determination.


●​ 23 pairs of chromosomes: 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes.
●​ Females have XX, males have XY.
●​ During spermatogenesis, males produce 50% X-carrying sperm and 50% Y-carrying
sperm.
●​ Females produce only X-carrying ova.
●​ Fertilization by an X-sperm results in a female (XX), and fertilization by a Y-sperm results
in a male (XY).
●​ The genetic makeup of the sperm determines the sex of the child.
●​ Each pregnancy has a 50% probability of a male or female child.
●​ Blaming women for bearing female children is a false notion.

4.6.2 Sex Determination in Honey Bee

●​ Sex determination is based on the number of chromosome sets received.


●​ Females (queen or worker) develop from fertilized eggs (diploid).
●​ Males (drones) develop from unfertilized eggs by parthenogenesis (haploid).
●​ Females are diploid (32 chromosomes), males are haploid (16 chromosomes).
●​ This is haplodiploid sex-determination system.
●​ Males produce sperm by mitosis and have no father or sons but have a grandfather and
grandsons.

4.7 Mutation

●​ Mutation: Alteration of DNA sequences resulting in changes in genotype and phenotype.


●​ Besides recombination, mutation is another source of DNA variation.
●​ Loss (deletions) or gain (insertion/duplication) of DNA segments can alter chromosomes,
leading to abnormalities (chromosomal aberrations).
●​ Chromosomal aberrations are common in cancer cells.
●​ Point mutation: Change in a single base pair of DNA, e.g., sickle cell anemia.
●​ Deletions and insertions of base pairs cause frame-shift mutations.
●​ Chemical and physical factors (mutagens) induce mutations, e.g., UV radiation.

4.8 Genetic Disorders

●​ Disorders have long been recognized as heritable.


●​ Pedigree analysis, studying family history of trait inheritance, became important after
Mendel's rediscovery, as controlled crosses are not possible in humans.
●​ Pedigree analysis traces a particular trait in a family tree across generations.
●​ It's a tool in human genetics to trace inheritance of specific traits, abnormalities, or
diseases.
●​ Standard symbols are used in pedigree analysis (Figure 4.13).
●​ Features are controlled by genes on DNA within chromosomes, transmitted across
generations.
●​ Changes or alterations in genetic material are mutations.
●​ Many human disorders are associated with inheritance of altered genes or
chromosomes.
●​ Genetic disorders are broadly classified as Mendelian disorders and Chromosomal
disorders.

4.8.2 Mendelian Disorders

●​ Mainly caused by alteration or mutation in a single gene.


●​ Inherited according to the principles of inheritance.
●​ Pedigree analysis can trace the inheritance pattern.
●​ Common Mendelian disorders: Haemophilia, Cystic fibrosis, Sickle-cell anaemia, Colour
blindness, Phenylketonuria, Thalassemia, etc..
●​ Mendelian disorders can be dominant or recessive, autosomal or sex-linked.
●​ X-linked recessive traits (e.g., haemophilia) are transmitted from carrier females to male
progeny.
●​ Representative pedigrees for dominant and recessive traits are shown (Figure 4.14).
●​ Colour Blindness: Sex-linked recessive disorder due to defect in red or green cones,
causing inability to distinguish red and green.
●​ Caused by mutation in genes on the X chromosome.
●​ More common in males (8%) than females (0.4%) due to single X chromosome in males.
●​ A son of a carrier mother has a 50% chance of being colour blind; the mother is usually
not affected due to the dominant normal gene.
●​ A daughter will be colour blind only if her mother is a carrier and her father is colour
blind.
●​ Haemophilia: Sex-linked recessive disease transmitted from unaffected carrier females
to some male progeny.
●​ Affects a protein involved in blood clotting, leading to non-stop bleeding from simple
cuts.
●​ Heterozygous carrier females can transmit the disease to sons.
●​ Females are rarely haemophilic (mother must be a carrier, father must be haemophilic).
●​ Queen Victoria's pedigree shows haemophilic descendants due to her being a carrier.
●​ Sickle-cell anaemia: Autosome-linked recessive trait, expressed in HbSHbS
homozygotes.
●​ Heterozygous HbAHbS individuals are carriers with sickle-cell trait but are apparently
unaffected.
●​ Caused by substitution of Glutamic acid (Glu) by Valine (Val) at the sixth position of the
beta globin chain of haemoglobin due to a single base substitution (GAG to GUG).
●​ Mutant haemoglobin polymerizes under low oxygen, changing RBC shape to sickle-like
(Figure 4.15).
●​ Phenylketonuria: Autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism.
●​ Affected individuals lack the enzyme to convert phenylalanine to tyrosine, leading to
phenylalanine accumulation, conversion to phenylpyruvic acid, mental retardation, and
excretion of these metabolites in urine.
●​ Thalassemia: Autosome-linked recessive blood disease with reduced synthesis of one
or more globin chains (alpha or beta) due to mutation or deletion.
●​ Results in abnormal haemoglobin and anaemia.
●​ Classified as alpha-thalassemia (affected alpha globin) or beta-thalassemia (affected
beta globin).
●​ Alpha-thalassemia is controlled by two genes (HBA1, HBA2) on chromosome 16;
severity depends on the number of affected genes.
●​ Beta-thalassemia is controlled by one gene (HBB) on chromosome 11; occurs due to
mutation of one or both genes.
●​ Thalassemia is a quantitative problem (too few globin molecules), while sickle-cell
anaemia is qualitative (incorrectly functioning globin).

4.8.3 Chromosomal Disorders

●​ Caused by absence, excess, or abnormal arrangement of one or more chromosomes.


●​ Aneuploidy: Gain or loss of chromosome(s) due to failure of chromatid segregation
during cell division (e.g., Down's syndrome: trisomy 21; Turner's syndrome: loss of X).
●​ Polyploidy: Increase in a whole set of chromosomes due to failure of cytokinesis after
telophase, common in plants.
●​ Normal human cell: 46 chromosomes (23 pairs - 22 autosomes, 1 sex chromosome
pair).
●​ Trisomy: Extra copy of a chromosome; Monosomy: Lack of one chromosome.
●​ These conditions have serious consequences.
●​ Common examples: Down's syndrome, Turner's syndrome, Klinefelter's syndrome.
●​ Down's Syndrome (Trisomy 21): Presence of an extra copy of chromosome 21.
●​ Characterized by short stature, small round head, furrowed tongue, partially open mouth,
broad palm with a characteristic crease, retarded physical, psychomotor, and mental
development (Figure 4.16).
●​ Klinefelter's Syndrome (47, XXY): Presence of an additional X-chromosome.
●​ Individuals have overall masculine development but also feminized features (breast
development - Gynaecomastia) and are sterile (Figure 4.17 a).
●​ Turner's Syndrome (45, X0): Absence of one X chromosome in females.
●​ Females are sterile (rudimentary ovaries) and lack other secondary sexual characters
(short stature, underdeveloped feminine features) (Figure 4.17 b).

Summary

●​ Genetics studies inheritance and its principles.


●​ Mendel's laws (Law of Dominance, Law of Segregation, Law of Independent
Assortment) explain inheritance patterns based on 'factors' (genes) existing as pairs
(alleles).
●​ Dominant alleles mask recessive alleles in heterozygotes.
●​ Alleles segregate during gamete formation.
●​ Not all traits show complete dominance (incomplete dominance, co-dominance).
●​ In dihybrid crosses, factors independently assort.
●​ Punnett square represents gamete combinations.
●​ Genotype (genes) determines phenotype (physical expression).
●​ Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance links Mendel's laws to chromosome behavior during
meiosis.
●​ Linked genes on the same chromosome do not independently assort; linkage maps
show gene arrangement.
●​ Sex-linked genes are linked to sex chromosomes (XX female, XY male in humans; ZZ
male, ZW female in birds).
●​ Mutation is a change in genetic material (point mutation, chromosomal changes like
polyploidy and aneuploidy).
●​ Sickle-cell anemia is an example of a point mutation.
●​ Pedigree analysis studies inheritable mutations in families.
●​ Chromosomal disorders like Down's syndrome (trisomy 21), Turner's syndrome (XO),
and Klinefelter's syndrome (XXY) are due to changes in chromosome number.

Exercises

●​ The exercises at the end list questions related to the concepts covered in the chapter.

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