Study Guide And Solutions Manual For Genetic Analysis: An Integrated Approach
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780134832258
Author: Mark F. Sanders, John L. Bowman, Peter Mirabito
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 15, Problem 7P
Using animal models of human diseases can lead to insights into the cellular and genetic bases of the diseases. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is the consequence of an X-linked recessive allele.
How would you make a mouse model of DMD?
How would you make a Drosophila model of DMD?
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Our understanding of maternal effect genes has been greatly aided by their identification in experimental organisms such as Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans. In experimental organisms with a short generation time, geneticists have successfully searched for mutant alleles that prevent the normal process of embryonic development. In many cases, the offspring die at early embryonic or larval stages. These are called maternal effect lethal alleles. How would a researcher identify a mutation that produced a recessive maternal effect lethal allele?
What is the difference between a maternal-effect gene and a zygotic gene? Of the following genes that play a role in Drosophila development, which are maternal-effect genes and which are zygotic? Explain your answer.
A. nanos
B. Antp
C. bicoid
D. lab
What would you predict to be the phenotype of a Drosophila larva whose mother was homozygous for a loss-of-function allele in the nanos gene?
Chapter 15 Solutions
Study Guide And Solutions Manual For Genetic Analysis: An Integrated Approach
Ch. 15 - 15.1 What purpose do the bla and lacZ genes serve...Ch. 15 - The human genome is 3109 bp in length. How many...Ch. 15 - 15.3 Ligase catalyzes a reaction between the...Ch. 15 - You have constructed four different libraries: a...Ch. 15 - Using the genomic libraries in Problem 4, you wish...Ch. 15 - The human genome is 3109bp. You wish to design a...Ch. 15 - 15.7 Using animal models of human diseases can...Ch. 15 - 15.8 Compare methods for constructing homologous...Ch. 15 - 15.9 Chimeric genefusion products can be used for...Ch. 15 - 15.10 Why are diseases of the blood simpler...
Ch. 15 - Injection of double-stranded RNA can lead to gene...Ch. 15 - Compare and contrast methods for making transgenic...Ch. 15 - 15.13 It is often desirable to insert cDNAs into a...Ch. 15 - 15.14 A major advance in the s was the development...Ch. 15 - 15.15 The bacteriophage lambda genome can exist in...Ch. 15 - 15.16 The restriction enzymes Xho and Sal cut...Ch. 15 - 15.17 The bacteriophage has a single-stranded DNA...Ch. 15 - 15.18 To further analyze the CRABS CLAW gene (see...Ch. 15 - You have isolated a genomic clone with an EcoR I...Ch. 15 - 15.20 You have identified a cDNA clone that...Ch. 15 - 15.21 You have isolated another cDNA clone of the...Ch. 15 - 15.22 You have identified five genes in S....Ch. 15 - You have generated three transgenic lines of maize...Ch. 15 - 15.24 Bacterial Pseudomonas species often possess...Ch. 15 - 15.25 Two complaints about some transgenic plants...Ch. 15 - 15.26 In Drosophila, lossoffunction Ultrabithorax...Ch. 15 - Prob. 27PCh. 15 - The highlighted sequence shown below is the one...Ch. 15 - Vitamin E is the name for a set of chemically...Ch. 15 - The RAS gene encodes a signaling protein that...Ch. 15 - 15.31 You have cloned a gene for an enzyme that...Ch. 15 - 15.32 About of occurrences of nonautoimmune type...Ch. 15 - Describe how having the Cas 9 gene at a genomic...Ch. 15 - 15.34 Would a gene drive system spread rapidly...
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- In Drosophila, one of the genes controlling wing length is located on the X chromosome. A recessive mutant allele of this gene makes the wings miniature—hence, its symbol m; the wild-type allele of this gene, m_, makes the wings long. One of the genes controlling eye color is located on an autosome. A recessive mutant allele of this gene makes the eyes brown—hence, its symbol bw; the wildtype allele of this gene, bw_, makes the eyes red. Miniature-winged, red-eyed females from one true-breeding strain were crossed to normal-winged, brown-eyed males from another true-breeding strain. 1. Predict the phenotypes of the F1 flies. 2. If these flies are intercrossed with one another, what phenotypes will appear in the F2, and in what proportions?arrow_forwardA couple who are both heterozygous for an autosomal recessive mutation that is narrowly expressed and fully penetrant are planning on having three children. What is the probability that one their children will be normal (unaffected) and two children will have the recessive mutant phenotype? Show your work. Please answer this question using the Bayes’ Theoremarrow_forwardUsually, the mutant alleles studied in Drosophila experiments are recessive because: A. they are difficult to create. B. they are loss of function mutations. C. they do not survive as long as dominant alleles. D. they do not occur in wild-type flies.arrow_forward
- A maternal effect gene in Drosophila, called torso, is found as a recessive allele that prevents the correct development of anterior- and posterior-most structures. A wild-type (homozygous) male is crossed to a female of unknown genotype. This mating produces 100% larva that are missing their anterior- and posterior-most structures and therefore die during early development. What is the genotype and phenotype of the female fly in this cross? What are the genotypes and phenotypes of the female fly’s parents? Show COMPLETE cross.arrow_forwardIn mice, the A allele causes agouti fur, the AY allele causes yellow fur and is dominant to the A allele. The homozygous AY AY genotype is lethal. Why is the AYAY homozygous condition lethal? The AY allele lacks an upstream merc gene which is required for normal embryonic development. The AY allele contains a null mutation in the A gene, which is required for normal embryonic development. The yellow pigment produced by A allele is required for survival. The AY allele highly transcribes the merc gene which is lethal in a homozygous AYAY individual. None of the other answers are correct.arrow_forwardIn marsupials, X inactivation occurs exclusively to paternally derived chromosomes. Which genes will ALWAYS be expressed in this situation? A. maternal X-linked genes B. paternal X-linked genes C. maternal Y-linked genes D. paternal Y-linked genesarrow_forward
- Red–green color blindness in humans is due to an X-linked recessive gene. A woman whose father is color blind possesses one eye with normal color vision and one eye with color blindness. Q. Propose an explanation for this woman’s vision pattern. Assume that no new mutations have spontaneously arisen.arrow_forwardRead the following passage carefully about some aspects of genetics involving a certain species of Drosophila and then answer the following questions in parts The gene for the production of eye colour in this species of fruit fly can be expressed as either normal red-eyes or as brown-eyes. The allele for the normal red eyes is dominant to that of brown, and is transmitted in normal Mendelian fashion. A gene involved with body colour in this species of fruit fly is located on the non-homologous portion of the X chromosome, and has two alleles, grey and yellow, where the grey allele is dominant to yellow. The two genes are NOT linked. a) Produce a key to clearly show the nature of the alleles associated with the eye colour in this species of Drosophila, and in each case justify your choice of letters and / or style of presentation to best depict the genetics involved. b) State the type of genetics involved in terms of body colour, justifying your answer with the evidence from…arrow_forwardWhy is it that mutations in bicoid and nanos exhibit genetic maternal effect in Drosophila (a mutation in the maternal parent produces a phenotype that shows up in the offspring), but mutations in runt and gooseberry do not?arrow_forward
- Molecular geneticists have performed experiments in which they altered the number of copies of the bicoid gene in flies, affecting the amount of Bicoid protein produced. a. What would be the effect on development of an increased number of copies of the bicoid gene? b. What would be the effect of a decreased number of copies of bicoid? Justify your answers.arrow_forwardWhich of the following statement(s) is/are true with regard to positional information in Drosophila? A. Morphogens are a type of molecule that conveys positional information. B. Morphogenetic gradients are established only in the oocyte, prior to fertilization. C. Cell adhesion molecules also provide a way for a cell to obtain positional information.arrow_forwardFigure 19.25 shows that the Sxl protein binds to the mRNA of the msl-2 gene, inhibiting translation of the mRNA’s proper reading frame. The MSL-2 protein is a transcription factor that binds to the X chromosome in XY males to double the level of X-linked gene transcription, thus equalizing X-linked gene expression in XY males and XX females. a. In which sex, XY males or XX females, would the Sxl protein bind to the msl-2 mRNA? b. As discussed in Problem 35, some Sxl alleles are lethal to females and others are lethal to males. Is the function of Sxl in regulating the synthesis of Msl-2 protein sufficient to explain the sex-specific lethality caused by both kinds of alleles? c. Predict the effect of loss-of-function mutations in msl-2 on male and female fertility and viability.arrow_forward
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