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Unit 3 Part 1 - Chapter 14 (Mendelian Genetics) - DAY 2


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AMRIT KAUR


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[Front]


Why are humans not good subjects for genetic research?
[Back]


- Generation time is too long​ - Parents produce relatively few offspring​ - Breeding experiments are unacceptable​ However, basic Mendelian genetics endures as the foundation of human genetics​ In human genetics, geneticists analyze the results of human matings that have already occurred​

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Unit 3 Part 1 - Chapter 14 (Mendelian Genetics) - DAY 2 - Marcador

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Unit 3 Part 1 - Chapter 14 (Mendelian Genetics) - DAY 2 - Detalles

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Why are humans not good subjects for genetic research?
- Generation time is too long​ - Parents produce relatively few offspring​ - Breeding experiments are unacceptable​ However, basic Mendelian genetics endures as the foundation of human genetics​ In human genetics, geneticists analyze the results of human matings that have already occurred​
Pedigree
- A pedigree is a family tree that describes the inheritance of a trait across generations​ - Pedigrees can be used to make predictions about future offspring - We can use the multiplication and addition rules to predict the probability of specific phenotypes ​
Recessively Inherited Disorders​
- Many genetic disorders are inherited in a recessive manner​ - These range from relatively mild to life-threatening​ - Recessively inherited disorders show up only in individuals homozygous for the allele​ - Example: Albinism is a recessive condition characterized by a lack of pigmentation in skin and hair​
Carriers
- Carriers are heterozygous individuals who carry the recessive allele but are phenotypically normal - Most individuals with recessive disorders are born to carrier parents​​ - If a recessive allele that causes a disease is rare, it is unlikely that two carriers will meet and mate​
Consanguineous matings
- Consanguineous matings (that is, between close relatives) increase the chance that both parents of a child carry the same rare allele ​ - Most societies and cultures have laws or taboos against marriages between close relatives​
Cystic fibrosis
- Cystic fibrosis is the most common lethal genetic disease in the United States, striking one out of every 2,500 people of European descent ​ - The cystic fibrosis allele results in defective or absent chloride transport channels in plasma membranes, leading to a buildup of chloride ions outside the cell​ - Symptoms include mucus buildup in some internal organs and abnormal absorption of nutrients in the small intestine​ - Untreated, cystic fibrosis can cause death by the age of 5​ - Daily doses of antibiotics to stop infection and physical therapies can prolong life​ - In the United States, more than half of those with cystic fibrosis now survive into their 40s​
Sickle-cell disease
- Sickle-cell disease affects one out of 400 African-Americans​ - It is caused by the substitution of a single amino acid in the hemoglobin protein in red blood cells​ - In homozygous individuals, all hemoglobin is abnormal (sickle-cell)​ - Symptoms include physical weakness, pain, organ damage, and even paralysis​ - Heterozygotes (said to have sickle-cell trait) are usually healthy but may suffer some symptoms​ - About one out of ten African-Americans has sickle-cell trait, an unusually high frequency ​ - Heterozygotes are less susceptible to the malaria parasite, so there is an advantage to being heterozygous in regions where malaria is common​
Dominantly Inherited Disorders​
- Some human disorders are caused by dominant alleles​ - Dominant alleles that cause a lethal disease are rare and arise by mutation​ - Example: Achondroplasia is a form of dwarfism caused by a rare dominant allele​
Huntington’s disease
- Huntington’s disease is a degenerative disease of the nervous system - The disease has no obvious phenotypic effects until the individual is about 35 to 40 years of age​ - Once the deterioration of the nervous system begins, the condition is irreversible and fatal​ - The timing of onset of a disease significantly affects its inheritance​ - There is a test that can detect the presence of the Huntington’s allele in an individual’s genome​ - Some individuals with a family history of Huntington’s disease choose to be tested for the allele​ - Others decide that it would be too stressful to find out​
Multifactorial Disorders​
- Many diseases, such as heart disease, cancer, alcoholism, and mental illnesses, have both genetic and environmental components​ - No matter what our genotype, our lifestyle has a tremendous effect on phenotype​
Genetic Testing and Counseling​
- Genetic counselors can provide information to prospective parents concerned about a family history for a specific disease​ - Fetal and newborn testing can also reveal genetic disorders​
Genetic Counselor Couple Example (For reference)
- Suppose a couple both have a brother who died from the same recessively inherited disease​ - A genetic counselor can help determine the risk that this couple will have a child with the disease​ - It is important to remember that each child represents an independent event in the sense that its genotype is unaffected by the genotypes of older siblings​ - If both members of the couple had a sibling with the recessively inherited illness, both of their parents were carriers​ - Thus each has a ⅔ chance of being a carrier themselves​ - If both are carriers, there is a ¼ chance of each child having the recessive illness​ - The overall probability of them having a child with the illness is ⅔ × ⅔ × ¼ = 1/9​
Tests for Identifying Carriers​
- For a growing number of diseases, tests are available that identify carriers and help define the odds of having an affected child more accurately​ - The tests enable people to make more informed decisions about having children​ - However, they raise other issues, such as whether affected individuals fully understand their genetic test results, and how the test results are used​
Amniocentesis
- Fetal Testing - In amniocentesis, the liquid that bathes the fetus is removed and tested for certain genetic disorders​
Chorionic villus sampling (CVS)
- Fetal Testing - In chorionic villus sampling (CVS), a sample of the placenta is removed and tested​
Fetal testing techniques
- Amniocentesis - Chorionic villus sampling - Other techniques, such as ultrasound, allow fetal health to be assessed visually in utero​
Newborn Screening​
- Some genetic disorders can be detected at birth by simple tests that are now routinely performed in most hospitals in the United States​ - One common test is for phenylketonuria (PKU), a recessively inherited disorder that occurs in one of every 10,000–15,000 births in the United States​ - The number of conditions that can be tested in newborns is over 100 and ever-increasing​