Most animals and many plants show sexual dimorphism; in other words, an individual can be either male or female. In most of these cases, sex is determined by special sex chromosomes. In these organisms, there are two categories of chromosomes, sex chromosomes and autosomes (the chromosomes other than the sex chromosomes). The rules of inheritance considered so far, with the use of Mendel’s analysis as an example, are the rules of autosomes. Most of the chromosomes in a genome are autosomes. The sex chromosomes are fewer in number, and, generally in diploid organisms, there is just one pair.
Let us look at the human situation as an example. Human body cells have 46 chromosomes: 22 homologous pairs of autosomes plus 2 sex chromosomes. In females, there is a pair of identical sex chromosomes called the X chromosomes. In males, there is a nonidentical pair, consisting of one X and one Y. The Y chromosome is considerably shorter than the X. At meiosis in females, the two X chromosomes pair and segregate like autosomes so that each egg receives one X chromosome. Hence the female is said to be the homogametic sex. At meiosis in males, the X and the Y pair over a short region, which ensures that the X and Y separate so that half the sperm cells receive X and the other half receive Y. Therefore the male is called the heterogametic sex.
The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has been one of the most important research organisms in genetics; its short, simple life cycle contributes to its usefulness in this regard (Figure 2-11 ). Fruit flies also have XX females and XY males. However, the mechanism of sex determination in Drosophila differs from that in mammals. In Drosophila, the number of X chromosomes determines sex: two X’s result in a female and one X results in a male. In mammals, the presence of the Y determines maleness and the absence of a Y determines femaleness. This difference is demonstrated by the sexes of the abnormal chromosome types XXY and XO.
#FruitFly #XChromosome #SexChromosome #genetics #biology #Entomology #XlinkedTraits #genotype #phenotype #KhanAcademy #NikolaysGeneticsLessons #geneticDisease #geneticDisorder #DNA #RNA #geneticsDisorders #homozygous #hemizygous #chromosomes #XChromosomeInheritance #dominantTrait #geneticDesease #XlinkedRecessive #AutosomalRecessive #GeneticsExamQuestionsSolutions #SexlinkedDominant #skewedXinactivation #Xlinked #Genetics101 #sexlinkedRecessive
1 view
38
7
10 years ago 00:04:39 169
Dance your PhD 2011: Fruit Fly
13 years ago 00:01:43 26
Fruit fly development in 3D
11 years ago 00:02:22 50
Brunneria borealis eats fruit fly
10 years ago 00:01:57 71
Five Fruit Flies Flew
4 years ago 00:02:07 7
The Flying Fruit Fly Circus
9 years ago 00:03:28 61
Bear Makes Ninja - Fruit Can’t Fly
11 years ago 00:02:21 24
Heterochaeta Nymph L3 Eats a Fruit Fly
7 years ago 00:09:26 148
Baby mantises eating fruit flies
4 years ago 00:03:48 3
[Live] 대 동 (Daedong) - Fruit Fly (날파리)
4 years ago 00:01:47 1
More fruit fly warnings for Adelaide suburbs | 7NEWS
5 years ago 01:10:48 1
Dynamic Banter 221 - Fruit Fly Piano
3 years ago 00:06:54 1
Fruit fly crossing problem
12 years ago 00:02:46 53
Baskerville - Fruitfly
5 years ago 00:02:32 139
David Sarif Fruit Flies
7 years ago 00:04:30 79
How you can make a fruit fly eat veggies | DIY Neuroscience, a TED series
3 years ago 00:04:34 178
This Freaky Fruit Fly Lays Eggs in Your Strawberries | Deep Look
6 years ago 00:36:03 1
Fruit Fly Tutorial, Tim Rickman (Part 1)
8 years ago 00:01:40 2
Fruit Fly Surgery | ScienceTake | The New York Times
7 years ago 00:04:56 8
Nada Surf - Fruit Fly (Live on KEXP)
10 years ago 00:02:26 6
SCAPE real-time 3D microscopy - Fruit fly larvae
8 years ago 00:01:03 7
Fruit fly nervous system in action
3 years ago 00:00:27 728
Fruit-fly Larva in the Auditory Canal
8 years ago 00:04:20 373
These Fighting Fruit Flies Are Superheroes of Brain Science | Deep Look