Thursday, November 19, 2015

14.4 Notes- Human Traits

Chapter 14.4- Human Traits
·         Pedigree Analysis
o   Family Pedigree- history for a particular trait and assembling this information into a family tree describing the traits of parents and children of a certain generation.
 












o   The figure above shows the pedigree of a family with a widow-peaked hairline.
o   The importance of a pedigree is to help calculate that probability of a future child.
o   Pedigrees are more serious when the alleles could cause a serious disease or disorder
·         Recessively Inherited Disorders
o   Carriers- heterozygotes may transmit the recessive allele to their offspring
o   Genetic disorders are not distributed among all group of people
o   When a disease-causing recessive allele is rare, it is relatively unlikely that two carriers of the same harmful allele will meet and mate.
o   Cystic Fibrosis- most common lethal genetic disease in the United States
o   Sickle-Cell Disease- most common inherited disorder among people of African descent
·         Dominantly Inherited Disorders-
o   Dominant alleles that cause a lethal disease are much less common than recessive alleles that have lethal effects
o   Huntington’s Disease- a degenerative disease of the nervous system, is caused by a lethal dominant allele
·         Genetic Testing
o   Avoiding simple Mendelian disorders is possible when the risk of a particular genetic disorder can be assessed before a child is conceived
o   Fetal Testing
§  Amniocentesis- tests performed in the 14th-16th week of pregnancy
§  (CVS)- physician inserts a narrow tube through the cervix into the uterus and suctions out a tiny sample of tissue
o   Newborn Screening
§  Some genetic disorders can be detected at birth simply by biochemical tests.
§  (PKU) is the most common newborn screening test.

§  Fetal and newborn screening for serious inherited diseases, tests for identifying carriers, and genetic counseling. 

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