6. Gene Mapping and Linkage Flashcards

1
Q

What did Thomas Morgan win the Nobel prize for

A

Physiology/Medicine in 1933
- Sex-linked traits in fruit flies
- Genetic linkage and recombination

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2
Q

The 3 theories that Morgan validated

A
  1. CHROMOSOMAL THEORY OF INHERITANCE: genes are carried on chromosomes and are in a specific order
  2. GENES ARE PHYSICAL ENTITIES THAT ARE INTEGRAL ON CHROMOSOMES: genes are composed of nucleotides in which recombination may occur
  3. CLOSELY RELATED SPECIEIS HAVE SIMILAR NUMBER AND ARRANGEMENTS OF CHROMOSOMES: supports the theory of evolution, recombination is a mechanism for divergence
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3
Q

Chromosomes and independent assortment (gamete perspective)

A
  • HOMOLOGOUS RECOMBINATION: the crossing over phase during meiosis 1 (prophase) - results in recombinant chromosomes aka non-parental chromosomes
  • NO CROSSING OVER: parental chromosomes aka nonrecombinant chromosomes
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4
Q

Do linked genes assort independently?

A

No, there is genetic linkage

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5
Q

Syntenic Genes

A
  • Genes that are located on the same chromosome
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6
Q

What happens when syntenic genes are located close together

A
  • Alleles can’t independently assort and causes genetic linkage (linked genes)
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7
Q

What does gene linkage produce

A

Produces a distinctive pattern of gamete genotypes since they recombine less during meiosis

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8
Q

What happens when syntenic genes are located far apart?

A
  • They assort following Mendels law of independent assortment (unlinked gene)
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9
Q

How does genetic linkage affect gamete frequencies

A

It creates different expected gamete frequencies because theres a greater number of parental gametes than recombinants compared to independent assortment - smaller number of recombinant gametes

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10
Q

Difference of crossing over in linked genes that are close together and far apart

A

Linked genes that are closer together are less likely to have crossing over compared to linked genes that are further apart.
Frequency of cross-over is roughly proportionate to the distance between a gene

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11
Q

What are the observed frequencies of genotypes and phenotypes of linked genes compared to expected frequencies in independent assortment

A
  • If they’re linked, parental gametes will be produced more than by chance (>50%) AKA showing more parental phenotype than expected. Recombinant gametes will be produced less than by chance (<50%)
  • If they’re unlinked, parental gametes with parental alleles will produce the same amount as recombinant gametes. Produces 4 genetically different gamete combinations (1:1:1:1)
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12
Q

What is complete linkage?

A

No recombination occurs at all - produces 2 equally frequent gametes with only parental allele combinations

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13
Q

What is incomplete linkage?

A

Recombination between the homologs produces a mix of parental and recombination gametes - produces 4 genetically different gametes (2 parents and 2 recombinants)
- >50% are parental, <50% is recombinant

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14
Q

Recombination frequency equation

A

r = (number of recombinants offspring)/(total number of offspring)

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15
Q

If crossing over rate is high/low what does that mean?

A

High = genes are further apart
Low = genes are closer together

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16
Q

If a gene has completely unlinked genes, what is the frequency?

A

Parental: 50% (25% and 25%)
Recombinants: 50% (25% and 25%)

17
Q

Anything over/under 50%, linked and unlinked

A

Over 50 = unlinked
Under 50 = linked

18
Q

William Bateson and Reginald Punnett - Gene linkage

A
  • Helped discover genetic linkage
  • When crossing flower colour and pollen grain shape, found that F2 is showed more parental phenotypes compared to recombinants. - not a 9:3:3:1 ratio.
19
Q

Thomas Morgan and gene linkage

A
  • Confirmed genetic linkage
  • Constructed the first genetic maps
  • Found that parental phenotypes are produced in F1 female gametes predominantly contain X chromosomes with 1 of the original parental sets of alleles
  • Recombination occurs on homologous X chromosomes
20
Q

Two point test crosses

A
  • Males have no crossovers because they only have 1 X chromy, so they produce parental gametes
  • Females have single crossing over - producing 2 parental gametes and 2 recombinant gametes
21
Q

Morgans expected vs observed ratios

A
  • Expected was 1:1:1:1 but observed was 1:1 parental and 1:1 recombinants
  • parental ratio > recombinants
  • parental ratio > 50%
  • recombinants <50%
22
Q

Harriet Creighton and Barbara McClintock

A
  • First demonstrated cytological evidence of recombination in corn
  • Chromosome 9 testing colour and starch type
  • Observed a physical exchange of genetic information of chromosomes
23
Q

Three point test cross

A
  • A test-cross designed to identify genetic linkage between 3 genes and provides data for determining recombination frequency between linked genes
  • 3 genes results in 8 genetically different gametic genotypes from each parents 2 parentals, 4 single crossovers, 2 double crossovers.
24
Q

Factors that cause recombination to vary

A
  1. SEX - Heterogametic organisms have lower recombination because theres a smaller recomb map.
  2. HOTSPOTS - recomb occurs more often than average based on the number of nucleotides present
  3. COLDSPOTS - recomb occurs less often than average based on the number of nucleotides present
  4. GENETIC RECOMBINATION MAP - relative position of genes based on recombination freq
  5. PHYSICAL GENETIC MAP - actual position of the genes based on nucleotide sequence