Heredity: Crash Course Biology #9

Heredity: Crash Course Biology #9

Understanding Heredity and Genetics

Introduction to Heredity

  • The speaker introduces his brother John, highlighting their shared genetic background due to having the same parents.
  • John mentions that while they share genes, knowledge about chromosomes and DNA only emerged in the mid-20th century.

Historical Perspectives on Heredity

  • The concept of heredity has ancient roots; Aristotle's ideas dominated for nearly 2,000 years, suggesting traits blend from both parents.
  • Aristotle believed semen was a refined form of menstrual blood, influencing terms like "bloodlines" in discussions of heredity.

Mendel's Contributions to Genetics

  • Gregor Mendel is recognized as the first modern scientist to study heredity systematically through experiments with pea plants.
  • Mendel established that inheritance follows specific patterns rather than simple blending.

Basics of Classical Genetics

  • Human cells contain 23 pairs of chromosomes; genes are segments of DNA on these chromosomes that determine traits.
  • Traits can be influenced by multiple genes (polygenic traits), or a single gene can affect multiple traits (pleiotropic).

Mendelian Traits and Alleles

  • Some traits are determined by a single gene, known as Mendelian traits; an example is earwax consistency.
  • The earwax trait is determined by one gene located on chromosome 16 with two alleles: one for wet wax (glycine) and one for dry wax (arginine).

Inheritance Patterns

  • Most body cells are diploid (two sets of chromosomes), inheriting one allele from each parent; sex cells (gametes) are haploid (one set).

Understanding Dominance and Genetics

The Concept of Dominance in Alleles

  • Dominance refers to the relationship between alleles where one allele masks or suppresses the expression of another.
  • In the case of earwax, the wet earwax allele from Mom is dominant (Big W), while Dad's dry earwax allele is recessive (little w).

Complexity Beyond Simple Dominance

  • Just because an allele is recessive doesn't mean it’s less common in genetic material than a dominant allele; there are complexities involved.
  • The inheritance pattern also depends on the alleles passed down from parents, indicating that genetics can be more intricate than initially assumed.

Genotypes: Heterozygous vs. Homozygous

  • Mom's genotype for earwax is heterozygous (Big W, little w) as she inherited different versions from her parents.
  • Dad's genotype is homozygous recessive (little w, little w), having received two identical alleles from his parents.

Determining Phenotype Through Punnett Squares

  • To determine their phenotype (physical expression), they consider using a Punnett Square to visualize potential outcomes based on parental genotypes.
  • A simple Punnett Square shows a 50% chance for each child to have either wet or dry earwax based on parental combinations.

Pleiotropic Genes and Their Effects

  • The gene affecting earwax also influences other traits like body odor, illustrating pleiotropy—where one gene affects multiple phenotypic traits.

Sex-linked Inheritance Explained

Chromosomal Basics

  • Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes: 22 pairs are autosomes and 1 pair consists of sex chromosomes (XX for females and XY for males).

Recessive Traits Linked to Sex Chromosomes

  • Certain genetic traits linked to sex are passed through sex chromosomes; men may express recessive traits due to lacking a second X chromosome that could mask them.

Example: Baldness in Males

  • Baldness often results from a recessive allele on the X chromosome; men need only one copy to express this trait, unlike women who require two copies for similar expression.

Maternal Influence on Genetic Traits

  • If a man goes bald, he can trace this trait back through maternal lineage—potentially blaming his maternal grandfather or great-grandfather for passing down the baldness allele.

Conclusion and Personal Note

Video description

Hank and his brother John discuss heredity via the gross example of relative ear wax moistness. This video uses sounds from Freesound.org. References: http://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/en/research/projects/DeptIII_Cultural_History_Heredity http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/genome/her_ari.html http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/article/4465 http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/science/29cnd-ear.html http://udel.edu/~mcdonald/mythearwax.html Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet? Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thecrashcourse/ CC Kids: http://www.youtube.com/crashcoursekids