378 Chapter 19
Rapid destruction of
sickle cells leads to anemia
Heart failure
Kidney failure
Abdominal pain
Paralysis
Heart failure
Pneumonia
Weakness
and fatigue
Impaired
mental function
Homozygous recessive individual
Abnormal hemoglobin
Sickling of red blood cells
Clumping of cells and
interference with blood
circulation leads to local
failures in blood supply
Normal HbA Sickle-cell HbS
val
his
leu
thr
pro
glu
glu
val
his
leu
thr
pro
val
glu
One amino acid
substituted in
hemoglobin
sickle cell
normal cell
or observable trait. Usually, however, the genetic founda-
tion of many human traits is more complicated.
one gene may affect several traits
Sometimes expression of a gene has effects on two or
more traits. This wide-ranging impact of a single gene is
called pleiotropy (ply-ah-trow-pee, after the Greek pleio-,
19.4
n Some traits have clearly dominant and recessive forms. For
most traits, however, the story is not so simple.
n Links to Red blood cells 8.1, ABO blood groups 8.4
Section 19.1 noted that genes are chemical instructions for
building proteins. A gene is “expressed” when its instruc-
tions are carried out and the cell makes the protein. In some
cases, the expression of a gene leads to a single phenotype,
Figure 19.8 A single genetic change leads to the many physical effects of sickle-cell anemia. A shows how an incorrect amino
acid has been substituted in the chain of amino acids making up the hemoglobin protein. The inset shows how the shape of a
sickled red blood cell differs from that of a normal red blood cell. B Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins, celebrity spokesperson for sickle-cell
anemia organizations. Right: The range of symptoms for a person who has inherited the mutated gene for hemoglobin’s beta chain
from both parents. There may be other effects as well. (© Cengage Learning)
single Genes, Varying effects
Ben Rose/Contributor/Getty Images
A
B
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