Chapter 15
Chapter 15
4. List three reasons why the fruit fly is an excellent subject for genetic studies.
Thomas Hunt Morgan selected Drosophila melanogaster as his experimental organism because a single mating would
produce hundreds of organisms, a new generation could be bred every two weeks, and the fruit fly only has four pairs of
chromosomes that are easily distinguishable with a light microscope.
6. When Thomas Hunt Morgan mated a white-eyed male fly with a red-eyed female, he came to the conclusion that the
trait for eye color was located on the chromosome that determines sex. Show this cross.
The parental generation was a cross between a red-eyed female and a white-eyed male. The F1 generation, all the
offspring of the P generation, had red eyes. The F2 generation showed a ratio of 3 red-eyed flies to 1 white-eyed fly, with
no white-eyed females.
7. What unusual result suggested that the eye-color trait is located on the X chromosome?
The white-eye trait only appeared in the male offspring of the F1 generation.
9. What is the SRY gene? Where is it found, and what does it do?
SRY, which stands for sex-determining region of Y, is a gene on the Y chromosome required for the development of
testes. In the absence of SRY, the gonads develop into ovaries.
13. A female who carries an allele for colorblindness, but who is not color-blind, mates with a male who has normal
color vision. What is the probability that they will have a son who is color-blind? !
If a carrier mates with a male who has normal color vision, there is a 50% chance that each daughter will be a carrier like
her mother and a 50% chance that each son will have the disorder.
14. What is a Barr body? Why do human females show a Barr body in their cells?
The inactive X in each cell of a female condenses into a compact object called a Barr body, which lies along the inside of
the nuclear envelope. Most of the genes of the X chromosome that forms the Barr body are not expressed. In the ovaries,
Barr-body chromosomes are reactivated in the cells that give rise to eggs, so every female gamete has an active X.
15. X inactivation maintains the proper gene dosage. How is the X chromosome inactivated?
The selection of which X chromosome will form the Barr body occurs randomly and independently in each embryonic
cell present at the time of X inactivation. As a consequence, females consist of a mosaic of two types of cells: those with
the active X derived from the father and those with the active X derived from the mother. After an X chromosome is
inactivated in a particular cell, all mitotic descendants of that cell have the same inactive X. Thus, if a female is
heterozygous for a sex-linked trait, about half her cells will express one allele, while the others will express the
alternative allele.
16. Why can you say that all calico cats are females?
The tortoiseshell gene is on the X chromosome, and the tortoiseshell phenotype requires the presence of two different
alleles, one for orange and one for black fur. Normally, only females can have both alleles, because only they have two X
chromosomes.
25. Which of these events results in Down syndrome? What are the four characteristics of Down syndrome?
An aneuploid condition, Down syndrome is usually the result of an extra chromosome 21, so that each body cell has a
total of 47 chromosomes. Because the cells are trisomic for chromosome 21, Down syndrome is often called trisomy 21.
Down syndrome includes characteristic facial features, short stature, correctable heart defects, and developmental delays.
Almost all males and about half of females with Down syndrome are sexually underdeveloped and sterile.
27. Label each type of alteration in chromosome structure and explain what occurs. !
A deletion removes a chromosomal segment. A duplication repeats a chromosomal segment. An inversion reverses a
segment within a chromosome. A translocation moves a segment from one chromosome to a nonhomologous
chromosome. In a reciprocal translocation, the most common type, nonhomologous chromosomes exchange fragments.
Less often, a nonreciprocal translocation occurs: a chromosome transfers a fragment but receives none in return.
29. What group of genes do you inherit only from your mother?
Maternal inheritance is the rule for mitochondrial genes in most animals and plants, because almost all the mitochondria
passed on to a zygote come from the cytoplasm of the egg. Because the parts of the body most susceptible to energy
deprivation are the nervous system and the muscles, most mitochondrial diseases primarily affect these systems.
30. What other organelle has its own genes? These are extranuclear genes.
Mitochondria contain small circular DNA molecules that carry a number of genes, as do chloroplasts and other plastids
in plants.