Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781259700903
Author: Leland Hartwell Dr., Michael L. Goldberg Professor Dr., Janice Fischer, Leroy Hood Dr.
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Textbook Question
Chapter 7, Problem 11P
Like the yellow Labrador retrievers featured in Chapter 3, golden retrievers are usually solid yellow. The golden retriever shown has an extremely rare black marking on its face. Explain the genetic basis for the appearance of this dog. Consider only the E and B genes listed in Table 3.3 (see also Figs. 3.12 and 3.13). (Also note that the black marking is not a mask.)
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In mice, the wild-type coat color, agouti (AA) [left mouse], is dominant to solid-colored, black fur (aa) [middle mouse]. However, a separate gene (C) is necessary for pigment production. A mouse that is homozygous for a recessive c allele at this locus is unable to produce pigment and is albino [right mouse] regardless of the allele present at locus A. Thus, the following genotypes are listed with their associated phenotypes:
~ A/A; C/C or A/A; C/c or A/a; C/C or A/a; C/c ==> "agouti"
~ a/a; C/C or a/a; C/c ==> "black"
~ A/A; c/c or A/a; c/c or a/a; c/c or a/a; c/c ==> "albino"
This is an example of recessive epistasis, in which the recessive c allele "stands upon" the possible genotypes for the A gene (A/A, A/a, or a/a).
If two agouti mice with the A/a; C/c genotype are mated, what is the expected phenotypic ratio in their offspring?
A.9 albino, 4 agouti, 3 black
B. 9 agouti, 4 albino, 3 black
C.9 black, 4 albino, 3 agouti
D.9 agouti, 4 black, 3 albino
What is a genetic reason for the absence of Labrador-shaped dogs that are a wolf-like gray (agouti) in color?
A geneticist examines an ear of corn in which most kernels are yellow, but he finds a few kernels with purple spots, as shown here. Give a possible explanation for the appearance of the purple spots in these otherwise yellow kernels, accounting for the different sizes of the spots.
Chapter 7 Solutions
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
Ch. 7 - The following is a list of mutational changes. For...Ch. 7 - What explanations can account for the following...Ch. 7 - The DNA sequence of one strand of a gene from...Ch. 7 - Among mammals, measurements of the rate of...Ch. 7 - Over a period of several years, a large hospital...Ch. 7 - Suppose you wanted to study genes controlling the...Ch. 7 - In a genetics lab, Kim and Maria infected a sample...Ch. 7 - The results of the fluctuation test Fig. 7.5 were...Ch. 7 - The following pedigree shows the inheritance of a...Ch. 7 - Autism is a neurological disorder thought to be...
Ch. 7 - Like the yellow Labrador retrievers featured in...Ch. 7 - Remember that Balancer chromosomes prevent the...Ch. 7 - Figure 7.14 shows examples of base substitutions...Ch. 7 - Figure 7.14a shows the mutagen 5-bromouracil 5-BU,...Ch. 7 - So-called two-way mutagens can induce both a...Ch. 7 - In 1967, J. B. Jenkins treated wild-type male...Ch. 7 - When a particular mutagen identified by the Ames...Ch. 7 - Prob. 18PCh. 7 - The Ames test uses the reversion rate His- to His...Ch. 7 - The mutant FMR-1 allele that causes fragile X...Ch. 7 - The physicist Stephen Hawking, famous for his...Ch. 7 - Aflatoxin B1 is a highly mutagenic and...Ch. 7 - In human DNA, 70 of cytosine residues that are...Ch. 7 - Bromodeoxyuridine BrdU is a synthetic nucleoside...Ch. 7 - Albinism in animals is caused by recessive...Ch. 7 - a. In Figure 7.22b, what can you say about the...Ch. 7 - Imagine that you caught a female albino mouse in...Ch. 7 - Plant breeders studying genes influencing leaf...Ch. 7 - In humans, albinism is normally inherited in an...Ch. 7 - a. Seymour Benzers fine structure analysis of the...Ch. 7 - a. You have a test tube containing 5 ml of a...Ch. 7 - Prob. 32PCh. 7 - The rosy ry gene of Drosophila encodes an enzyme...Ch. 7 - Nine rII- mutants of bacteriophage T4 were used in...Ch. 7 - In a haploid yeast strain, eight recessive...Ch. 7 - In Problem 24, you learned that Bloom syndrome is...Ch. 7 - The pathway for arginine biosynthesis in...Ch. 7 - In corn snakes, the wild-type color is brown. One...Ch. 7 - In a certain species of flowering plants with a...Ch. 7 - The intermediates A, B, C, D, E, and F all occur...Ch. 7 - In each of the following cross schemes, two...Ch. 7 - Prob. 42PCh. 7 - The following complementing E. coli mutants were...Ch. 7 - In 1952, an article in the British Medical Journal...Ch. 7 - Mutations in an autosomal gene in humans cause a...Ch. 7 - Antibodies were made that recognize six proteins...Ch. 7 - Prob. 47PCh. 7 - Prob. 48PCh. 7 - In addition to the predominant adult hemoglobin,...Ch. 7 - Most mammals, including New World primates such as...Ch. 7 - Humans are normally trichromats; we have three...
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- Draw all possible linkage maps for these three genes.arrow_forwardTake the example of B-thalassemia, an autosomal recessive genetic disease that particularly affects people from around the Mediterranean. This disease is associated with an anomaly of hemoglobin, a protein essential for the transport of oxygen, which is composed of four chains: two alpha (a) and two beta (B). In case of B-thalassemia, the ẞ chains are produced in insufficient or no quantity in an individual homozygous recessive resulting in insufficient production of overall hemoglobin leading to anemia and other physiological challenges. The gene that controls the synthesis of the ẞ chains is located on chromosome 11. Here is part of the coding portion of this gene (which controls a total of 146 amino acids and of which you only see the portion 36 to 41) and one of the targeted mutations: 1. Give the sequence of amino acids from the template and mutated strands. 2. What type of point mutation is it? 3. Using the principles of the theory of evolution, explain briefly and generally why…arrow_forwardFamilial retinoblastoma, a rare autosomal dominant defect, arose in a large family that had no prior history of the disease. Consider the following pedigree (the darkly colored symbols represent affected individuals): a. Circle the individual(s) in which the mutation most likely occurred. b. Is the person who is the source of the mutation affected by retinoblastoma? Justify your answer. c. Assuming that the mutant allele is fully penetrant, what is the chance that an affected individual will have an affected child?arrow_forward
- a. If an individual who is homozygous for the mutation found in individual 2 and heterozygous for the mutation found in individual 4 marries an individual who is homozygous for the mutation found in individual 4 and heterozygous for the mutation found in individual 2, what will be the phenotype of their children? b. List the intermediate that would build up in each of the types of children who could not produce protein E.arrow_forwardThe genotype of EB27 and EB67 are unknown. Based on pedigree, what are the most likely genotype of each individual?arrow_forwardFemales of wild-type Strain A and males of mutant Strain B, as well as females of mutant Strain B and males of wild-type Strain A, make reciprocal crosses. Explain why reciprocal crosses are needed in genetics experiments involving Drosophila fruit flies.arrow_forward
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