lecture 15: Sex Linked

Linkage and Inheritance Patterns

  • Linkage refers to multiple genes that are associated with each other, resulting in altered inheritance patterns.

  • Today’s focus remains on basic Mendelian principles, with expectations of complexity next week due to linked genes.

Biological Sex Determination

  • Definition: Biological sex is determined by specific chromosomes inherited from parents.

  • Biological sex is established early in development based on the genetic information contained within gametes (sperm and egg).

  • Historical perspectives on sex determination trace back to thinkers like Aristotle.

Aristotle's Perspective on Sex Determination

  • Proposed that men possessed "heat" and women had "coldness."

  • The concept related to sex determination suggested that male heat could produce male children, while a female's cold led to female offspring.

  • Some modern parallels can be drawn from reptile behaviors, such as crocodiles determining sex based on egg temperature in nests.

Secondary Sexual Characteristics

  • Secondary characteristics help differentiate biological sexes, such as:

    • Facial hair in males versus absence or minimal presence in females.

    • Disparate coloration in birds: males often display bright colors to attract females.

  • Some organisms (e.g., nematodes) may appear identical; sex is determined uniquely by chromosome composition:

    • One X chromosome = male.

    • Two X chromosomes = hermaphrodite (both male and female traits).

Concepts of Chromosomes and Inheritance

  • Chromosomes can be categorized as allosomes (sex chromosomes) and autosomes (non-sex chromosomes).

  • Two sex chromosomes present in humans:

    • Homogametic (XX): Females can only produce X gametes.

    • Heterogametic (XY): Males can produce X or Y gametes, considered hemizygous due to different chromosome types.

    • The Y chromosome is critical for male biological sex.

Characteristics of Chromosomes

  • Presence of the Y chromosome primarily determines male biological sex in mammals.

  • Changes in autosomes lead to severe consequences, while sex chromosome variations often have milder effects (e.g., Klinefelter syndrome, XXY individuals possess male characteristics despite an extra X).

  • For fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster), sex is determined by X chromosome quantity:

    • One X = male.

    • Two or more X chromosomes = female.

Birds and Different Sex Chromosome Designation

  • In birds, the sex chromosomes are designated as Z and W:

    • ZZ: Males (homogametic).

    • ZW: Females (heterogametic).

SRY Gene and Sex Determination

  • The SRY gene on the Y chromosome is imperative for male sex determination.

  • It influences the production of testosterone, guiding the development of male sexual characteristics during early embryonic development.

  • The absence of the SRY gene leads to female development.

Pseudoautosomal Region (PAR)

  • A small region on the tip of both X and Y chromosomes facilitates pairing during meiosis:

    • Ensures correct segregation during gamete formation.

    • Allows for recognition across differing chromosome types in males and females.

Sex-Linked Traits and Their Inheritance

  • The Caltech Fly lab, led by Thomas Morgan, studied inheritance as related to sex, particularly using fruit flies as a model organism.

  • The eye color gene in fruit flies exemplifies sex linkage:

    • Red eyes (dominant) linked to the X chromosome versus white eyes (recessive).

    • Reciprocal crosses help elucidate sex linkage:

      • If results differ between crosses, the trait is sex-linked; if not, it’s autosomal.

Color Blindness as an Example of Sex-Linked Trait

  • Color blindness serves as a quintessential example of an X-linked trait:

    • Typically more common in males (inherited from mothers).

    • Different degrees of color blindness exist.

Further Traits: Sex Limited, Sex Influenced

  • Sex-Limited Traits: Expressed only in one sex and linked to autosomes.

    • Example: Lactation involves enzymes that are expressed in females only.

  • Sex-Influenced Traits: Traits that are affected by sex but appear on autosomes.

    • Example: Male pattern baldness is dominated by one allele in males, but differs in expression in females.

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