Epistasis - the interaction between two or more genes to control a single phenotypeÂ
Polygenic inheritance (interaction between genes)Â
Genes rarely act independently of each otherÂ
Genes usually cooperate in the production of a trait:Â
Formation of molecular complexesÂ
Formation of molecular pathways eg. cell signalling
Function of one gene can mask or modify the function of another cooperating gene (epistasis):Â
Protein of one gene may stimulate or repress another gene and its proteinÂ
Absence of a functional gene (eg. through mutation) often affects the function of another gene and its proteinÂ
Eg. two genes acting on the same colour trait in tomatoes:Â
Red pigment requires R1 and R2 productsÂ
Yellow pigment requires R1Â
Lack of R1 will give greenÂ
Epistasis occurs when one gene masks the effects of another gene acting on the same trait
Epistatic = doing the masking (eg. R1 is epistatic to R2)Â
Hypostatic = masked geneÂ
Epistatic ratios mat allow a geneticist to determine the order of genes in a particular pathwayÂ
Coat colour in miceÂ
One recessive gene (c ) can mask all the other colour coding genes
Trihybrid cross - AaBbCc x AaBbCcÂ
A and B give a different coat colour
The agouti gene C is dominant Â
When C is a wild type complex relationship between A and B segregating as 9:3:3:1Â
But when c is homozygous mutant, coat colour is white ie. when the genotype is A_B_cc or aabbcc
C masks the effects of the other 2 genes; it could code for a precursor or makes a precursor that A and B act onÂ
Within dihybrid F1 crosses can find epistatic relationships that can give modified 9:3:3:1 ratiosÂ
12:3:1 = dominant epistasisÂ
9:7 = complementary gene actionÂ
15:1 = duplicate gene actionÂ
13:3 = dominant suppression epistasisÂ
Dominant epistasisÂ
12:3:1Â
Dominant allele of one gene masks the effect of both alleles of another geneÂ
Example:Â
If you are B_ you're whiteÂ
If you are bb, colour is determined by A/aÂ
A_ is yellowÂ
aa is greenÂ
B is epistatic to A and aÂ
Complementary gene actionÂ
9:7Â
Eg. two genes are needed to produce flower colourÂ
Perform a cross between double homozygotes:Â
What is the ratio of pink : white in the F2?Â
9:7Â
Need at least one wild type allele for both genes, otherwise whiteÂ
Duplicate gene actionÂ
15:1Â
Double dominant alleles, two genes working on the same part of a pathway
Genes don't have to work in opposition for interaction to be epistaticÂ
Eg. Kernel colour in wheat
Cross AABB (coloured) x aabb (colourless
Cross the F1s (AaBb)Â
15:1
Because either of the genes can produce a wild type phenotypeÂ
Dominant suppression epistasisÂ
13:3
Some genes have the ability to suppress the expression of a gene at a second locusÂ
Suppressor - a genetic factor that prevents the expression of alleles at a second locus; this is an example of an epistatic interaction
Eg. Production of the chemical Malvidin in the plant PrimulaÂ
Synthesis of malvidin (controlled by K gene) and the suppression of synthesis at the K gene (controlled by D gene) are dominant traitsÂ
The F1 plant with the genotype KkDd will not produce malvidin because of the presence of the dominant D alleleÂ
Distribution of the F2 phenotypes after the F1 were crossed
Human example of epistasisÂ
Bombay phenotypeÂ
Involves the interaction between the ABO alleles and a third antigen H coded for by a different gene (H)Â
Individuals homozygous recessive at the H gene (hh) will be blood type O regardless of the phenotype of the I-gene which has the alleles for the AB blood typesÂ
H codes for an antigen H that is the precursor molecule for the formation of the A and B antigensÂ
Genetically, individuals may be A, B or AB but appear as O if the are hhÂ
Can't make A or B without HÂ