Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Lab 07 - Gene mapping in humans

In Drosophila it is easy to find out if genes are linked, and how closely, since it can be determined by doing experimental crosses and measuring phenotypic frequencies in the offspring (see lab 06). In addition to that, we know exactly what genes are found in specific chromosomes (fruit flies have only four pairs of chromosomes).
In humans it is not that straight forward. Experimental crosses are out of the question, and humans tend to have very few offspring (even large families have very few offspring compared with the potentially thousands of offspring of a Drosophila cross).

In humans, we must rely on pedigrees. In this lab we considered three different pedigrees showing linkage between a genetic disorder and another trait (easily observable). Students learned and practiced how to identify parental and recombinant types in the offpring of each generation, and in the third exercise calculated the odds ratio to determine linkage of traits.

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