development homework #2 is due 10/17 bonus #1 is due 10/24

33
Developme nt Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Upload: edward-casey

Post on 25-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Development

•Homework #2 is due 10/17

•Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Page 2: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

So,

Smoking during pregnancy may have indirect and/or direct affects on fetal development, and these affects may manifest themselves in adults.

Page 3: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Correlation of weight (BMI) %

Biological siblings 34

Parents and children living together 26

Identical twins reared together 80

Identical twins reared apart 72

Fraternal twins reared together 43

Adopted children and parents 4

Unrelated children living together 1

Correlation of weight and relatedness

Page 4: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Nature and Nurture:

Are traits coded for by genes fixed while traits coded for by the environment are under our control?

Page 5: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Fig 12.1

Developmental mutants of Drosophila melanogaster

Page 6: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Vertebrate Development:

from zygote to adult

Page 7: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Besides adding cells, development can involve cell death.

Page 8: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

CB 21.19

Development of a mouse paw: yellow areas show dying cells

Page 9: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Early embryo development

Page 10: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Totipotent: ability to differentiate into any cell-type

Page 11: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Totipotency is limited to early stages of animal development

Page 12: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Mature, differentiated plant cells are totipotent

Page 13: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Why do cells lose totipotency?

Page 14: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Why do cells lose totipotency?

Page 15: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

•Gene expression can be controlled at many points between DNA and making the final proteins.

•Changes in the various steps of gene expression control when and how much of a product are produced.

Page 16: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Why change gene expression?•Different cells need different components•Responding to the environment•Replacement of damaged/worn-out parts

Page 17: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

DNA packaging fluctuates…genes being expressed are unpackaged, genes not needed are tightly packaged.

Page 18: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Normally DNA is loosely packaged

During mitosis DNA is tightly packaged as chromosomes and

individually visible

box 2.1

Page 19: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

DNA packaging fluctuates…Some of the tight packaging of DNA is irreversible.

Page 20: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Irreversible packaging of DNA partially explains the loss of totipotency.

Page 21: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Stem cells still have totipotency

Page 22: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Embryonic Stem Cells are totipotent

Adult Stem Cells are pluripotent (only form some cell types)

Page 23: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Fig 12.2

Developmental information can be encoded by both genetic and non-genetic information.

Page 24: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

What genetic mechanisms regulate/allow development?

Page 25: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

All humans are female for the first nine weeks of development

Page 26: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24
Page 27: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

All humans are female for

the first nine weeks of

development

Page 28: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Down’s Syndrome is caused by an extra chromosome 21.

Page 29: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Down’s Syndrome is caused by an extra chromosome 21.

Too much information disrupts normal development.

Page 30: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Flower parts:Complexity from a few simple genes

4 whorls of a flower

Page 31: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

CB 21.20

Each whorl expresses a specific combination of three genes

Page 32: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Changing expression of A, B, or C genes

changes organ identity

CB 21.20

Page 33: Development Homework #2 is due 10/17 Bonus #1 is due 10/24

Development

•Homework #2 is due 10/17•Bonus #1 is due 10/24