ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781260406092
Author: HARTWELL, Leland, HOOD, Leroy, Goldberg, Michael
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education/stony Brook University
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Textbook Question
Chapter 3, Problem 19P
Using old Fugate family Bibles and the Perry County, Kentucky historical record, a hematologist in the 1960s constructed the pedigree of the Blue People of Troublesome Creek. Many members of the Fugate family had blue skin, a rare but harmless condition known as methemoglobemia; other people in the pedigree had blue lips and fingertips but their skin was otherwise normal. The blue color is due to lack of function of the enzyme NADH diaphorase, which repairs hemoglobin damaged by oxidation. Unrepaired hemoglobin accumulates as blue pigment.
a. | Based on the pedigree, describe the dominance relation between the wild-type and mutant alleles of the gene for NADH diaphorase. |
b. | The pedigree indicates certain people who were known to have only blue lips and fingertips. However, the historical record is incomplete. Which other people in the diagram must have had this |
c. | Two of the matings in the pedigree are shown as possibly consanguineous, as indicated by a dotted horizontal line above a solid horizontal line. The reason for the uncertainty is that the historical record does not say whether or not Mary [Mary (?)], the wife of the Martin Fugate at the top left of the diagram, was a Ritchie or a Smith or was instead unrelated to either family. Explain why a geneticist would think that Mary is likely a Ritchie or a Smith. |
d. | All of the Blue People (people with methemoglobemia) in the pedigree are Fugates, yet the blue mutation did not originate in the Fugate family. Which person or people introduced the mutant NADH diaphorase allele(s) into the Fugate family? |
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Chapter 3 Solutions
ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
Ch. 3 - For each of the terms in the left column, choose...Ch. 3 - In four-oclocks, the allele for red flowers is...Ch. 3 - The Aa heterozygous snapdragons in Fig. 3.3 are...Ch. 3 - Recall from Chapter 2 Fig. 2.20 that Mendels R...Ch. 3 - In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, very...Ch. 3 - A cross between two plants that both have yellow...Ch. 3 - In radishes, color and shape are each controlled...Ch. 3 - A wild legume with white flowers and long pods is...Ch. 3 - Assuming no involvement of the Bombay phenotype in...Ch. 3 - Several genes in humans in addition to the ABO...
Ch. 3 - Alleles of the gene that determines seed coat...Ch. 3 - One of your fellow students tells you that there...Ch. 3 - In a population of rabbits, you find three...Ch. 3 - In clover plants, the pattern on the leaves is...Ch. 3 - Fruit flies with one allele for curly wings Cy and...Ch. 3 - In certain plant species such as tomatoes and...Ch. 3 - In a species of tropical fish, a colorful orange...Ch. 3 - People heterozygous for normal and nonfunctional...Ch. 3 - Using old Fugate family Bibles and the Perry...Ch. 3 - A rooster with a particular comb morphology called...Ch. 3 - A black mare was crossed to a chestnut stallion...Ch. 3 - Filled-in symbols in the pedigree that follows...Ch. 3 - You perform a cross between two true-breeding...Ch. 3 - a. How would you describe inheritance of flower...Ch. 3 - Suppose the intermediate called Colorless...Ch. 3 - Explain the difference between epistasis and...Ch. 3 - The dominant allele H reduces the number of body...Ch. 3 - Secretors genotypes SS and Ss secrete their A and...Ch. 3 - Normally, wild violets have yellow petals with...Ch. 3 - A woman who is blood type B has a child whose...Ch. 3 - The following table shows the responses of blood...Ch. 3 - Three different pure-breeding strains of corn that...Ch. 3 - In mice, the AY allele of the agouti gene is a...Ch. 3 - A student whose hobby was fishing pulled a very...Ch. 3 - Suppose that blue flower color in a plant species...Ch. 3 - This problem examines possible biochemical...Ch. 3 - Considering your answers to Problem 36, does the...Ch. 3 - You picked up two mice one female and one male...Ch. 3 - Figure 3.21 and Fig. 3.28b both show traits that...Ch. 3 - Three genes in fruit flies affect a particular...Ch. 3 - The garden flower Salpiglossis sinuata painted...Ch. 3 - In foxgloves, three different petal phenotypes...Ch. 3 - In a culture of fruit flies, matings between any...Ch. 3 - Prob. 44PCh. 3 - A couple wants to know the probability that their...Ch. 3 - This problem illustrates why classical geneticists...Ch. 3 - Prob. 47PCh. 3 - Familial hypercholesterolemia FH is an inherited...Ch. 3 - You have come into contact with two unrelated...Ch. 3 - Polycystic kidney disease is a dominant trait that...Ch. 3 - Identical monozygotic twins have similar, but not...Ch. 3 - Using each of the seven coat color genes discussed...
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