Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

118 ■ CHAPTER 07 Patterns of Inheritance


GENETICSGENETICS


G


ordon Lark’s best friend was dying. Soft
and shaggy, with tousled black hair,
Georgie hadn’t left Lark’s side in 10
years, since his daughter had first purchased
Georgie as a puppy from two kids by the side of
the road. But as she aged, Georgie had become
ill with Addison’s disease, a disorder in which
her body’s immune system began to attack and
destroy her own tissues. Georgie passed away
in 1996.
Lark, a scientist at the University of Utah in
Salt Lake City, was heartbroken. To help heal the
wound, he decided to adopt another dog of the
same breed—a Portuguese water dog (PWD),
named for its history of helping Portuguese
fishermen with their work (Figure 7.1). He
contacted Karen Miller, a PWD breeder on a
farm in rural New York. As part of the owner
screening process, Miller asked Lark about his
profession. “I said I was a soybean geneticist,”
Lark recalls, “but all she heard was ‘blah, blah,
genetics, blah, blah.’ And she got really excited.”
As a breeder, Miller was keenly interested
in how dogs inherit characteristics from their
parents, so Miller and Lark began talking by
phone each week about genetics. When it came
time to pick up his new puppy, Mopsa, Lark
requested the bill. But Miller didn’t want Lark’s
money. She had something else in mind: she gave

him Mopsa free of charge, in the hope that Lark
would start researching dog genetics. “That’s
silly,” Lark told her. He wasn’t a dog researcher.
Lark had spent a career studying the genetic
traits of bacteria and soybeans.
A genetic trait is any inherited characteristic
of an organism that can be observed or detected
in some manner. Some genetic traits are invari-
ant, meaning they are the same in all individu-
als of the species. All soybeans, for example, have
pods that contain seeds. Other genetic traits are
variable; for example, soybean seeds occur in
various sizes and colors, including black, brown,
and green.
Apart from his love for canines, Lark wasn’t
intimately familiar with dogs’ physical and
biochemical traits. Physical traits, such as
the shape of a dog’s face, are easy to observe.
Biochemical traits, on the other hand, such
as a dog’s susceptibility to Addison’s disease,
are often more difficult to observe. It is easy to
collect physical and biochemical information
from a field of soybeans but far more difficult to
collect it from domesticated animals in homes
all over the country. And to study dogs, Lark
would also need data on behavioral traits,
such as shyness and extroversion—factors he
didn’t have to take into account with soybeans.
All of these traits—physical, biochemical, and
behavioral—are influenced by genes.

Getting to the


Genes


A gene is the basic unit of information affect-
ing a genetic trait. At the molecular level,
a gene consists of a stretch of DNA on a
chromosome—a threadlike molecule, made
of DNA and proteins, that is found in the
nucleus of a eukaryotic cell (Figure 7.2). A
gene contains the information, or “code,” for
a specific protein; the protein then causes
or contributes to a particular genetic trait.
To study PWD traits, Lark would need dog
DNA, which can be obtained from blood or
saliva. Once he had that DNA, he could begin
to search for alleles—different versions of a
given gene—and link them to genetic traits.
Alleles of a gene arise by mutation, which is
any change in the DNA that makes up a gene

Figure 7.1


A Portuguese Water Dog

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