Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Sex chromosomes
A. Distinguish sex chromosomes vs. autosomes and homogamety vs. heterogamety
B. Types of sex chromosome mechanisms:
XX:XY mechanism (male heterogamety)
ZZ:ZW mechanism (female heterogamety)
XX:XO mechanism (male heterogamety)
Nondisjunction
A. Misdivision of chromosomes at meiosis (or mitosis), generally leading to daughter cells that
possess an extra or are missing a single chromosome
1. In humans, nondisjunction of sex chromosomes can generate Turners (XO) and Klinefelters
(XXY) individuals
2. Additional proof of the chromosomal theory of inheritance
Sex effects
A. Sex-influenced dominance
1. Interaction between alleles in heterozygote differs between the sexes
a) examples include horns in sheep, pattern baldness in humans
B. Sex-limited inheritance
1. Where trait exists in only on one of the two sexes
a) can occur at single-locus level (long feathers in chickens)
example: feather length in chickens
females all have short feathers
in males,
b) more common at the multiple-gene level involving complex traits (e.g., egg laying, milk
production)
C. Maternal effects
1. Where the phenotype of an individual is a function of the genotype(s) of the maternal parent
2. Single-locus examples include dextral vs sinestral coiling in land snails, phenylkeonuria in
humans
3. Multiple-locus examples include many developmental and other embryonic traits that can
presumably be under the influence of natural selection
D. Genomic imprinting
1. Phenomenon where regulatory or other genes silence (perhaps by direct modification) an
allele at a gene such that one copy of the gene (either maternal or paternal) is not expressed
during development and/or thereafter
note that which of the X chromosomes is inactivated is random, but that once
inactivation occurs it is a permanent state
(ii)
note also that inactivation of an X chromosome occurs subsequent to the initial cell
divisions of a zygote (between the 16- and 64-cell stage)
(iii)
this can produce mottled (sometimes called calico) phenotypes; note that
mammalian females heterozygous for sex-linked genes are phenotypic mosaics