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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Chapter 19, Problem 29P
How would a human with a mutation in a maternal effect gene most likely be recognized?
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How would a human with a mutation in a maternaleffect gene most likely be recognized?
You found a strain of mutant fruit flies (Drosophila) living on the rotten bananas in your dorm room. You notice that many of the larvae have abnormal abdominal segments. You want to know if the “abdomenless” mutation is a maternal effect gene. Describe an experiment you would do to determine this, and the results that would support and contradict the notion that the abdomenless gene encodes a maternal determinant.
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?
Chapter 19 Solutions
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
Ch. 19 - Match each of the terms in the left column to the...Ch. 19 - a. If you were interested in the role of a...Ch. 19 - Early C. elegans embryos display mosaic...Ch. 19 - Hypomorphic mutations in the wingless gene of...Ch. 19 - Prob. 5PCh. 19 - In 1932, H. J. Muller suggested a genetic test to...Ch. 19 - a. Explain how you could use worms transformed...Ch. 19 - Suppose you want to determine whether a particular...Ch. 19 - Sevenless is an unusual receptor protein in that...Ch. 19 - Suppose that you generated flies containing a...
Ch. 19 - Drosophila researchers have collected many strains...Ch. 19 - As an alternative to random mutagenesis,...Ch. 19 - A C. elegans nematode gene called par-1 helps to...Ch. 19 - The molecular identity of the fruit fly rugose...Ch. 19 - To determine the focus of action of boss,...Ch. 19 - Suppose a particular gene is required for early...Ch. 19 - Researchers have exploited Minute mutations in...Ch. 19 - Some ts alleles are temperature sensitive during...Ch. 19 - The following figure shows the temperature-shift...Ch. 19 - A temperature-sensitive allele of the gene...Ch. 19 - Hypomorphic alleles of a pleiotropic gene...Ch. 19 - In addition to the maternal effect genes that...Ch. 19 - The yan gene encodes a transcription factor that...Ch. 19 - Recall from Chapter 17 that in Drosophila, sex...Ch. 19 - a. Explain the difference between maternal...Ch. 19 - In the 1920s, Arthur Boycott, working with the...Ch. 19 - The Drosophila mutant screen shown on the...Ch. 19 - Some genes are required both zygotically and...Ch. 19 - How would a human with a mutation in a maternal...Ch. 19 - One important demonstration that Bicoid is an...Ch. 19 - The hunchback gene contains a 5 transcriptional...Ch. 19 - In flies developing from eggs laid by a...Ch. 19 - Wild-type embryos and mutant embryos lacking the...Ch. 19 - The Drosophila even-skipped eve gene has four...Ch. 19 - In Drosophila with loss-of-function mutations...Ch. 19 - It is crucial to the development of Drosophila...Ch. 19 - In the plant Arabidopsis thaliana, every flower is...
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- What are the possible genotypes of the PTC locus?arrow_forwardWhy are mutations in the INK4 locus so dangerous?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
- What is the effect of the NDM gene?arrow_forwarda) Do the loss of function phenotypes differ between the genes between the genes in figure 1? What does this mean? b) What are the two cell types responsible for producing maternal gene products involved in terminal patterning in the Drosophila cocyte? In which of these two cell types is each of the three genes expressed? c) Based on the phenotypes you observed for the three genes, and on the differences in their expression patterns, which one of the genes do you think is the localised determinant of terminal patterning? d❘ From the gain-of-function experiments, do trunk and torso like work upstream or downstream of torso? Explain. (4 m e) How might you test which of the trunk and torso-like genes acts upstream of the other? f) The torso gene has been shown to have another important role in Drosophila development outside of terminal patterning. What do you think would be a good first experiment to do to begin to investigate possible other roles for the trunk or torso - like genes? C a…arrow_forwardExplain how a loss-of-function allele in a gene encoding a cohesin protein could be dominant to itswild-type counterpart.arrow_forward
- If a Drosophila is found to have axons that cross back and forth over the body's midline several times, it is most likely a) a Robo knockout. b) a Slit knockout. c) a commissureless mutant. d) normal.arrow_forwardHow would you explain gene expression? How is it that a particular genotype is actually expressed as a phenotype? I am looking for details here, including an explanation of the molecular mechanisms involved.arrow_forwardWhy are maternal effect genes so difficult to identify via mutant analysis?arrow_forward
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