Introduction
to Genetics
• Royal Hemophilia and
Romanov DNA
• The Importance of
Genetics
The Role of Genetics in
Biology
Genetic Variation is
the Foundation
of
Evolution
Divisions of Genetics
• A Brief History of
Genetics
Prehistory
Early Written Records
The Rise of Modern
Genetics
Twentieth-Century
Genetics
The Future of Genetics
• Basic Concepts in
Genetics
Royal Hemophilia
and Romanov DNA
On August 12, 1904, Tsar Nicholas Romanov II of
Russia
wrote in his diary: “A great never-to-be forgotten
day when
the mercy of God has visited us so clearly.” That
day Alexis,
Nicholas’s first son and heir to the Russian throne,
had been
born.
At birth, Alexis was a large and vigorous baby with
yellow
curls and blue eyes, but at 6 weeks of age he began
spontaneously hemorrhaging from the navel. The
bleeding
persisted for several days and caused great alarm.
As he
grew and began to walk, Alexis often stumbled and
fell, as
all children do. Even his small scrapes bled
profusely, and
minor bruises led to significant internal bleeding.
It soon
became clear that Alexis had hemophilia.
Hemophilia results from a genetic deficiency of
blood
clotting. When a blood vessel is severed, a complex
cascade
of reactions swings into action, eventually
producing a protein
called fibrin. Fibrin molecules stick together to
form a
clot, which stems the flow of blood. Hemophilia,
marked by
slow clotting and excessive bleeding, is the result
if any one
of the factors in the clotting cascade is missing or
faulty. In
those with hemophilia, life-threatening blood loss
can occur
with minor injuries, and spontaneous bleeding into
joints
erodes the bone with crippling consequences.
Alexis suffered from classic hemophilia, which is
caused
by a defective copy of a gene on the X chromosome.
Females
possess two X chromosomes per cell and may be
unaffected
carriers of the gene for hemophilia. A carrier has
one normal
version and one defective version of the gene; the
normal version
produces enough of the clotting factor to prevent
hemophilia.
A female exhibits hemophilia only if she inherits
two
defective copies of the gene, which is rare. Because
males have
a single X chromosome per cell, if they inherit a
defective
copy of the gene, they develop hemophilia.
Consequently,
hemophilia is more common in males than in females.
Alexis inherited the hemophilia gene from his
mother,
Alexandra, who was a carrier. The gene appears to
have
originated with Queen Victoria of England
(1819–1901),
( FIGURE 1.1). One of her sons, Leopold, had
hemophilia
and died at the age of 31 from brain hemorrhage
following
a minor fall. At least two of Victoria’s daughters
were carriers;
through marriage, they spread the hemophilia gene to
the royal families of Prussia, Spain, and Russia. In
all, 10 of
Queen Victoria’s male descendants suffered from
hemophilia.
Six female descendants, including her granddaughter
Alexandra (Alexis’s mother), were carriers.
Nicholas and Alexandra constantly worried about
Alexis’s health. Although they prohibited his
participation
in sports and other physical activities, cuts and
scrapes
◗
were inevitable, and Alexis experienced a number of
severe
bleeding episodes. The royal physicians were
helpless during
these crises—they had no treatment that would stop
the
bleeding. Gregory Rasputin, a monk and
self-proclaimed
“miracle worker,” prayed over Alexis during one
bleeding
crisis, after which Alexis made a remarkable
recovery.
Rasputin then gained considerable influence over the
royal
family.
At this moment in history, the Russian Revolution
broke
out. Bolsheviks captured the tsar and his family and
held
them captive in the city of Ekaterinburg. On the
night of July
16, 1918, a firing squad executed the royal family
and their
attendants, including Alexis and his four sisters.
Eight days
later, a protsarist army fought its way into
Ekaterinburg.
Although army investigators searched vigorously for
the bodies
of Nicholas and his family, they found only a few
personal
effects and a single finger. The Bolsheviks
eventually won the
revolution and instituted the world’s first
communist state.
Historians have debated the role that Alexis’s
illness may
have played in the Russian Revolution. Some have
argued
that the revolution was successful because the tsar
and
Alexandra were distracted by their son’s illness and
under the
influence of Rasputin. Others point out that many
factors
contributed to the overthrow of the tsar. It is
probably naive
to attribute the revolution entirely to one sick
boy, but it is
clear that a genetic defect, passed down through the
royal
family, contributed to the success of the Russian
Revolution.
More than 80 years after the tsar and his family
were
executed, an article in the Moscow News reported the
discovery
of their skeletons outside Ekaterinburg. The remains
had first been located in 1979; however, because of
secrecy
surrounding the tsar’s execution, the location of
the graves
was not made public until the breakup of the Soviet
government
in 1989. The skeletons were eventually recovered and
examined by a team of forensic anthropologists, who
concluded
that they were indeed the remains of the tsar and
his
wife, three of their five children, and the family
doctor,
cook, maid, and footman. The bodies of Alexis and
his sister
Anastasia are still missing.
To prove that the skeletons were those of the royal
family,
mitochondrial DNA (which is inherited only from the
mother) was extracted from the bones and amplified
with a
molecular technique called the polymerase chain
reaction
(PCR). DNA samples from the skeletons thought to
belong
to Alexandra and the children were compared with DNA
taken from Prince Philip of England, also a direct
descendant
of Queen Victoria. Analysis showed that
mitochondrial
DNA from Prince Philip was identical with that from
these
four skeletons.
DNA from the skeleton presumed to be Tsar Nicholas
was compared with that of two living descendants of
the
Romanov line. The samples matched at all but one
nucleotide
position: the living relatives possessed a cytosine
(C) residue at this position, whereas some of the
skeletal
DNA possessed a thymine (T) residue and some
possessed a
C. This difference could be due to normal variation
in the
DNA; so experts concluded that the skeleton was
almost
certainly that of Tsar Nicholas. The finding
remained controversial,
however, until July 1994, when the body of
Nicholas’s younger brother Georgij, who died in
1899, was
exhumed. Mitochondrial DNA from Georgij also
contained
both C and T at the controversial position, proving
that the
skeleton was indeed that of Tsar Nicholas.
This chapter introduces you to genetics and reviews
some concepts that you may have encountered briefly
in a
preceding biology course. We begin by considering
the importance
of genetics to each of us, to society at large, and
to
students of biology.We then turn to the history of
genetics,
how the field as a whole developed. The final part
of the
chapter reviews some fundamental terms and
principles of
genetics that are used throughout the book.
There has never been a more exciting time to
undertake
the study of genetics than now. Genetics is one of
the
frontiers of science. Pick up almost any major
newspaper or
news magazine and chances are that you will see
something
related to genetics: the discovery of cancer-causing
genes;
the use of gene therapy to treat diseases; or
reports of possible
hereditary influences on intelligence, personality,
and
sexual orientation. These findings often have
significant
economic and ethical implications, making the study
of genetics
relevant, timely, and interesting.
More information about the
history of Nicholas II and other tsars of Russia and
about
hemophilia
The Importance of Genetics
Alexis’s hemophilia illustrates the important role
that genetics
plays in the life of an individual. A difference in
one
gene, of the 35,000 or so genes that each human
possesses,
changed Alexis’s life, affected his family, and
perhaps even
altered history.We all possess genes that influence
our lives.
They affect our height and weight, our hair color
and skin
pigmentation. They influence our susceptibility to
many
diseases and disorders ( FIGURE 1.2) and even
contribute
to our intelligence and personality. Genes are
fundamental
to who and what we are.
Although the science of genetics is relatively new,
people
have understood the hereditary nature of traits and
have
“practiced” genetics for thousands of years. The
rise of agriculture
began when humans started to apply genetic
principles
to the domestication of plants and animals. Today,
the
major crops and animals used in agriculture have
undergone
extensive genetic alterations to greatly increase
their yields
and provide many desirable traits, such as disease
and pest
1.3 The Green Revolution used genetic techniques to
develop new
strains of crops that greatly increased world food
production during the
1950s and 1960s. (a) Norman Borlaug, a leader in the
development of new
strains of wheat that led to the Green Revolution,
and a family in Ghana. Borlaug
received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970. (b)
Traditional rice plant (top) and
modern,high-yielding rice plant (bottom). (Part a, UPI/Corbis-Bettman;
part b, IRRI.)
◗
(a) (b)
resistance, special nutritional qualities, and
characteristics
that facilitate harvest. The Green Revolution, which
expanded
global food production in the 1950s and 1960s,
relied
heavily on the application of genetics ( FIGURE 1.3).
Today, genetically engineered corn, soybeans, and
other
crops constitute a significant proportion of all the
food produced
worldwide.
The pharmaceutical industry is another area where
genetics
plays an important role. Numerous drugs and food
additives
are synthesized by fungi and bacteria that have been
genetically manipulated to make them efficient
producers of
these substances. The biotechnology industry employs
molecular
genetic techniques to develop and mass-produce
substances
of commercial value. Growth hormone, insulin, and
clotting factor are now produced commercially by
genetically
engineered bacteria ( FIGURE 1.4). Techniques of
molecular
genetics have also been used to produce bacteria that
remove
minerals from ore, break down toxic chemicals, and
inhibit
damaging frost formation on crop plants.
Genetics also plays a critical role in medicine.
Physicians
recognize that many diseases and disorders have a
hereditary
component, including well-known genetic disorders
such as
sickle-cell anemia and Huntington disease as well as
many
common diseases such as asthma, diabetes, and
hypertension.
Advances in molecular genetics have allowed
important
insights into the nature of cancer and permitted the
development
of many diagnostic tests. Gene therapy—the direct
alteration of genes to treat human diseases—has
become a
reality.
Information about
biotechnology, including its history and
applications
◗
◗
www.whfreeman.com/pierce
Introduction to Genetics 000
The Role of Genetics in Biology
Although an understanding of genetics is important
to all
people, it is critical to the student of biology.
Genetics provides
one of biology’s unifying principles: all organisms
use
nucleic acids for their genetic material and all
encode their
genetic information in the same way. Genetics
undergirds
the study of many other biological disciplines.
Evolution,
for example, is genetic change taking place through
time; so
the study of evolution requires an understanding of
basic
genetics. Developmental biology relies heavily on
genetics:
tissues and organs form through the regulated
expression of
genes ( FIGURE 1.5). Even such fields as taxonomy,
ecology,
and animal behavior are making increasing use of
genetic
methods. The study of almost any field of biology or
medicine
is incomplete without a thorough understanding of
genes and genetic methods.
Genetic Variation Is the Foundation of Evolution
Life on Earth exists in a tremendous array of forms
and features
that occupy almost every conceivable environment.
All
life has a common origin (see Chapter 2); so this
diversity
has developed during Earth’s 4-billion-year history.
Life is also
characterized by adaptation: many organisms are
exquisitely
suited to the environment in which they are found.
The history
of life is a chronicle of new forms of life
emerging, old
forms disappearing, and existing forms changing.
Life’s diversity and adaptation are a product of
evolution,
which is simply genetic change through time.
Evolution
is a two-step process: first, genetic variants arise
randomly
and, then, the proportion of particular variants
increases or
decreases. Genetic variation is therefore the
foundation of all
evolutionary change and is ultimately the basis of
all life as
we know it. Genetics, the study of genetic
variation, is critical
to understanding the past, present, and future of
life.
◗
5
1.4 The biotechnology industry uses molecular
genetic methods to produce substances of economic
value. In the apparatus shown, growth hormone is
produced by genetically engineered bacteria. (James
Holmes/Celltech Ltd./Science Photo Library/Photo
Researchers.)
◗
1.5 The key to development lies in the regulation
of gene expression. This early fruit-fly embryo
illustrates the localized production of proteins
from two
genes, ftz (stained gray) and eve (stained brown),
which
determine the development of body segments in the
adult f ly. (Peter Lawrence, 1992. The Making of a
Fly, Blackwell
Scientific Publications.)
◗
Divisions of Genetics
Traditionally, the study of genetics has been
divided into
three major subdisciplines: transmission genetics,
molecular
genetics, and population genetics ( FIGURE 1.6).
Also
known as classical genetics, transmission genetics encompasses
the basic principles of genetics and how traits are
passed from one generation to the next. This area
addresses
the relation between chromosomes and heredity, the
arrangement
of genes on chromosomes, and gene mapping.
Here the focus is on the individual organism—how an
individual
organism inherits its genetic makeup and how it
passes its genes to the next generation.
Molecular genetics concerns the chemical nature of
the
gene itself: how genetic information is encoded,
replicated,
and expressed. It includes the cellular processes of
replication,
transcription, and translation—by which genetic
information
is transferred from one molecule to another—and gene
◗
Concepts
Heredity affects many of our physical features as
well as our susceptibility to many diseases and
disorders. Genetics contributes to advances in
agriculture, pharmaceuticals, and medicine and is
fundamental to modern biology. Genetic variation
is the foundation of the diversity of all life.
000 Chapter I
regulation—the processes that control the expression
of genetic
information. The focus in molecular genetics is the
gene—its structure, organization, and function.
Population genetics explores the genetic composition
of
groups of individual members of the same species
(populations)
and how that composition changes over time and
space. Because evolution is genetic change,
population genetics
is fundamentally the study of evolution. The focus
of population
genetics is the group of genes found in a
population.
It is convenient and traditional to divide the study
of
genetics into these three groups, but we should
recognize
that the fields overlap and that each major
subdivision can
be further divided into a number of more specialized
fields,
such as chromosomal genetics, biochemical genetics,
quantitative
genetics, and so forth. Genetics can alternatively
be
subdivided by organism (fruit fly, corn, or
bacterial genetics),
and each of these organisms can be studied at the
level
of transmission, molecular, and population genetics.
Modern genetics is an extremely broad field,
encompassing
many interrelated subdisciplines and
specializations.
Information about careers in
genetics
A Brief History of Genetics
Although the science of genetics is young—almost
entirely
a product of the past 100 years—people have been
using
genetic principles for thousands of years.
Prehistory
The first evidence that humans understood and
applied
the principles of heredity is found in the
domestication of
plants and animals, which began between
approximately
10,000 and 12,000 years ago. Early nomadic people
depended
on hunting and gathering for subsistence but, as
human populations grew, the availability of wild
food resources
declined. This decline created pressure to develop
new sources of food; so people began to manipulate
wild
plants and animals, giving rise to early agriculture
and the
first fixed settlements.
Initially, people simply selected and cultivated
wild
plants and animals that had desirable traits.
Archeological
evidence of the speed and direction of the
domestication
process demonstrates that people quickly learned a
simple
but crucial rule of heredity: like breeds like. By
selecting
and breeding individual plants or animals with
desirable
traits, they could produce these same traits in
future
generations.
The world’s first agriculture is thought to have
developed
in the Middle East, in what is now Turkey, Iraq,
Iran,
Syria, Jordan, and Israel, where domesticated plants
and
animals were major dietary components of many
populations
by 10,000 years ago. The first domesticated
organisms
included wheat, peas, lentils, barley, dogs, goats,
and
sheep. Selective breeding produced woollier and more
manageable goats and sheep and seeds of cereal
plants that
were larger and easier to harvest. By 4000 years
ago, sophisticated
genetic techniques were already in use in the
Middle East. Assyrians and Babylonians developed
several
hundred varieties of date palms that differed in
fruit size,
color, taste, and time of ripening. An Assyrian
bas-relief
from 2880 years ago depicts the use of artificial
fertilization
to control crosses between date palms ( FIGURE 1.7).
Other crops and domesticated animals were developed
by
cultures in Asia, Africa, and the Americas in the
same
period.
◗
Transmission
genetics
Molecular
genetics
Population
genetics
(c) (d)
(e)
1.6 Genetics can be subdivided into three
interrelated
fields. (Top left, Alan Carey/Photo Researchers; top
right, MONA file M0214602 tif; bottom, J.
Alcock/Visuals
Unlimited.)
◗
Concepts
The three major divisions of genetics are
transmission genetics, molecular genetics, and
population genetics. Transmission genetics
examines the principles of heredity; molecular
genetics deals with the gene and the cellular
processes by which genetic information is
transferred and expressed; population genetics
concerns the genetic composition of groups of
organisms and how that composition changes over
time and space.
www.whfreeman.com/pierce
Introduction to Genetics 000
Early Written Records
Ancient writings demonstrate that early humans were
aware
of their own heredity. Hindu sacred writings dating
to 2000
years ago attribute many traits to the father and
suggest that
differences between siblings can be accounted for by
effects
from the mother. These same writings advise that one
should avoid potential spouses having undesirable
traits
that might be passed on to one’s children. The
Talmud, the
Jewish book of religious laws based on oral
traditions dating
back thousands of years, presents an uncannily
accurate
understanding of the inheritance of hemophilia. It
directs
that, if a woman bears two sons who die of bleeding
after
circumcision, any additional sons that she bears
should not
be circumcised; nor should the sons of her sisters
be circumcised,
although the sons of her brothers should. This
advice accurately depicts the X-linked pattern of
inheritance
of hemophilia (discussed further in Chapter 6).
The ancient Greeks gave careful consideration to
human reproduction and heredity. The Greek physician
Alcmaeon (circa 520 B.C.) conducted dissections of
animals
and proposed that the brain was not only the
principle site
of perception, but also the origin of semen. This
proposal
sparked a long philosophical debate about where
semen
was produced and its role in heredity. The debate
culminated
in the concept of pangenesis, which proposed that
specific particles, later called gemmules, carry
information
from various parts of the body to the reproductive
organs,
from where they are passed to the embryo at the
moment
of conception ( FIGURE 1.8a). Although incorrect,
the
concept of pangenesis was highly influential and
persisted
until the late 1800s.
Pangenesis led the ancient Greeks to propose the
notion
of the inheritance of acquired characteristics, in
which
traits acquired during one’s lifetime become
incorporated
into one’s hereditary information and are passed on
to
◗
Concepts
Humans first applied genetics to the domestication
of plants and animals between approximately
10,000 and 12,000 years ago. This domestication
led to the development of agriculture and fixed
human settlements.
1.7 Ancient peoples practiced genetic
techniques in agriculture. (Top) Comparison of
ancient (left) and modern (right) wheat. (Bottom)
Assyrian bas-relief sculpture showing artificial
pollination of date palms at the time of King
Assurnasirpalli II, who reigned from 883–859 B.C.
(Top left and right, IRRI; bottom, Metropolitan
Museum of Art,
gift of John D. Rockefeller Jr., 1932.
◗
000 Chapter I
offspring; for example, people who developed musical
ability
through diligent study would produce children who
are
innately endowed with musical ability. The notion of
the
inheritance of acquired characteristics also is no
longer
accepted, but it remained popular through the
twentieth
century.
The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384 – 322 B.C.) was
keenly interested in heredity. He rejected the
concepts of
both pangenesis and the inheritance of acquired
characteristics,
pointing out that people sometimes resemble past
ancestors more than their parents and that acquired
characteristics
such as mutilated body parts are not passed on.
Aristotle believed that both males and females made
contributions
to the offspring and that there was a struggle of
sorts between male and female contributions.
Although the ancient Romans contributed little to
the
understanding of human heredity, they successfully
developed
a number of techniques for animal and plant
breeding;
the techniques were based on trial and error rather
than any general concept of heredity. Little new was
added
to the understanding of genetics in the next 1000
years.
The ancient ideas of pangenesis and the inheritance
of acquired
characteristics, along with techniques of plant and
animal breeding, persisted until the rise of modern
science
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The Rise of Modern Genetics
Dutch spectacle makers began to put together simple
microscopes
in the late 1500s, enabling Robert Hooke (1653–1703)
to discover cells in 1665. Microscopes provided
naturalists
with new and exciting vistas on life, and perhaps it
was excessive
enthusiasm for this new world of the very small that
gave
rise to the idea of preformationism. According to
preformationism,
inside the egg or sperm existed a tiny miniature
adult, a homunculus, which simply enlarged during
development.
Ovists argued that the homunculus resided in the
egg, whereas spermists insisted that it was in the
sperm
( FIGURE 1.9). Preformationism meant that all traits
would
be inherited from only one parent—from the father if
the
homunculus was in the sperm or from the mother if it
was in
the egg. Although many observations suggested that
offspring
possess a mixture of traits from both parents,
preformationism
remained a popular concept throughout much of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Another early notion of heredity was blending
inheritance,
which proposed that offspring are a blend, or
mixture,
◗
1 According to the pangenesis
concept, genetic information
from different parts of the body…
1 According to the germ-plasm
theory, germ-line tissue in
the reproductive organs…
3 …where it is transferred
to the gametes.
2 …travels to the
reproductive organs…
2 …contains a complete set
of genetic information…
3 …that is transferred
directly to the gametes.
(a) Pangenesis concept
Sperm
Egg Egg
Sperm
Zygote Zygote
(b) Germ–plasm theory
1.8 Pangenesis, an early concept of inheritance,
compared with
the modern germ-plasm theory.
◗
Introduction to Genetics 000
In June 2000, scientists from the
Human Genome Project and Celera
Genomics stood at a podium with
former President Bill Clinton to
announce a stunning achievement—
they had successfully constructed a
sequence of the entire huan genome.
Soon this process of identifying and
sequencing each and every human
gene became characterized as
"mapping the human genome". As
with maps of the physical world, the
map of the human genome provides a
picture of locations, terrains, and
structures. But, like explorers,
scientists must continue to decipher
what each location on the map can tell
us about diseases, human health, and
biology. The map accelerates this
process, as it allows researchers to
identify key structural dimensions of
the gene they are exploring, and
reminds them where they have been
and where they have yet to explore.
What does the map of the human
genome depict? when researchers
discuss the sequencing of the genome,
they are describing the identification
of the patterns and order of the 3
billion human DNA base pairs. While
this provides valuable information
about overall structure and the
evolution of humans in relation to
other organisms, researchers really
wanted the key information encoded
in just 2% of this enormous map—the
information that makes most of the
proteins that compose you and me.
Comprised of DNA, genes are the
basic units of heredity; they hold all of
the information required to make the
proteins that regulate most life
functions, from digesting food to
battling diseases. Proteins stand as the
link between genes and
pharmaceutical drug development,
they show which genes are being
expressed at any given moment, and
provide information about gene
function.
Knowing our genes will lead to
greater understanding and radically
improved treatment of many diseases.
However, sequencing the entire human
genome, in conjunction with
sequencing of various nonhuman
genomes under the same project, has
raised fundamental questions about
what it means to be human. After all,
fruit flies possess about one-third the
number of genes as humans, and an
ear of corn has approximately the
same number of genes as a human! In
addition, the overall DNA sequence of
a chimpanzee is about 99% the same
as the human genome sequence. As
the genomes of other species become
available, the similarities to the human
genome in both structure and
sequence pattern will continue to be
identified. At a basic level, the
discovery of so many commonalities
and links and ancestral trees with
other species adds credence to
principles of evolution and Darwinism.
Some of the most anticipated
developments and potential benefits of
the Human Genome Project directly
affect human health; researchers,
practicing physicians, and the general
public eagerly await the development
of targeted pharmaceutical agents and
more specific diagnostic tests.
Pharmacogenomics is at the
intersection of genetics and
pharmacology; it is the study of how
one's genetic makeup will affect his or
her response to various drugs. In the
future, medicine will potentially be
safer, cheaper, and more disease
specific, all while causing fewer side
effects and acting more effectively, the
first time around.
There are however some hard
ethical questions that follow in the
wake of new genetic knowledge.
Patients will have to undergo genetic
testing in order to match drugs to
their genetic makeup. Who will have
access to these result—just the health
care practitioner, or the patient's
insurance company, employer/school,
and/or family members? While the
tests were administered for one case,
will the information derived from them
be used for other purposes, such as
for identification of other
conditions/future diseases, or even in
research studies?
How should researchers conduct
studies in pharmacogenomics? Often
they need to group study subjects by
some kind of identifiabe traits that
they believe will assist in separating
groups of drugs, and in turn they
separate people into populations. The
order of almost all of the DNA base
pairs (99.9%) is exactly the same in all
humans. So, this leaves a small
window of difference. There is
potential for stigmatization of
individuals and groups, of people
based on race and ethnicity inherent in
genomic research and analysis. As
scientists continue drug development,
they must be careful to not further
such ideas, especially as studies of
nuclear DNA indicate that there is
often more genetic variation within
"races" or cultures, than between
"races" or cultures. Stigmatization or
discrimination can occur through
genetic testing and human subjects
research on populations.
These are just a few of the
ethical issues arising out of one
development of the Human Genome
Project. The potential applications of
genome research are staggering, and
the mapping is just the beginning.
Realizing this was simply a starting
point, the draft sequences of the
human genome released in February
2001 by the publicly funded Human
Genome Project and the private
company, Celera Genomics, are freely
available on the Internet. A long road
lies ahead, where scientists will be
charged with exploring and
understanding the functions of and
relationships between genes and
proteins. With such exploration
comes a responsibility to
acknowledge and address the ethical,
legal, and social implications of this
exciting research.
The New Genetics
ETHICS • SCIENCE • TECHNOLOGY
by Arthur L. Caplan and Kelly
A. Carroll
Mapping the Human Genome—
Where does it lead, and what does
it mean?
000 Chapter I
of parental traits. This idea suggested that the
genetic material
itself blends, much as blue and yellow pigments
blend to
make green paint. Once blended, genetic differences
could
not be separated out in future generations, just as
green paint
cannot be separated out into blue and yellow
pigments. Some
traits do appear to exhibit blending inheritance;
however, we
realize today that individual genes do not blend.
Nehemiah Grew (1641–1712) reported that plants
reproduce
sexually by using pollen from the male sex cells.
With this information, a number of botanists began
to experiment
with crossing plants and creating hybrids.
Foremost among these early plant breeders was Joseph
Gottleib Kölreuter (1733–1806), who carried out
numerous
crosses and studied pollen under the microscope. He
observed that many hybrids were intermediate between
the
parental varieties. Because he crossed plants that
differed in
many traits, Kölreuter was unable to discern any
general
pattern of inheritance. In spite of this limitation,
Kölreuter’s
work set the foundation for the modern study of
genetics.
Subsequent to his work, a number of other botanists
began
to experiment with hybridization, including Gregor
Mendel
(1822–1884) ( FIGURE 1.10), who went on to discover
the
basic principles of heredity. Mendel’s conclusions,
which
were unappreciated for 45 years, laid the foundation
for our
modern understanding of heredity, and he is
generally recognized
today as the father of genetics.
Developments in cytology (the study of cells) in the
1800s had a strong influence on genetics. Robert
Brown
(1773–1858) described the cell nucleus in 1833.
Building on
the work of others, Matthis Jacob Schleiden
(1804–1881)
and Theodor Schwann (1810–1882) proposed the concept
of the cell theory in 1839. According to this
theory, all life is
composed of cells, cells arise only from preexisting
cells, and
the cell is the fundamental unit of structure and
function in
living organisms. Biologists began to examine cells
to see
how traits were transmitted in the course of cell
division.
Charles Darwin (1809–1882), one of the most
influential
biologists of the nineteenth century, put forth the
theory
of evolution through natural selection and published
his ideas in On the Origin of Species in 1856.
Darwin recognized
that heredity was fundamental to evolution, and he
◗
1.9 Preformationism was a popular idea of
inheritance in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries. Shown here is a drawing of a homunculus
inside a sperm. (Science VU/Visuals Unlimited.)
◗
1.10 Gregor Mendel was the founder of modern
genetics. Mendel first discovered the principles of
heredity by crossing different varieties of pea
plants
and analyzing the pattern of transmission of traits
in
subsequent generations. (Hulton/Archive by Getty
Images.)
◗
Introduction to Genetics 000
conducted extensive genetic crosses with pigeons and
other
organisms. However, he never understood the nature
of
inheritance, and this lack of understanding was a
major
omission in his theory of evolution.
In the last half of the nineteenth century, the
invention
of the microtome (for cutting thin sections of
tissue for
microscopic examination) and the development of
improved
histological stains stimulated a flurry of
cytological research.
Several cytologists demonstrated that the nucleus
had a role
in fertilization. Walter Flemming (1843–1905)
observed the
division of chromosomes in 1879 and published a
superb
description of mitosis. By 1885, it was generally
recognized
that the nucleus contained the hereditary
information.
Near the close of the nineteenth century, August
Weismann (1834–1914) finally laid to rest the notion
of the
inheritance of acquired characteristics. He cut off
the tails
of mice for 22 consecutive generations and showed
that the
tail length in descendants remained stubbornly long.
Weismann proposed the germ-plasm theory, which holds
that the cells in the reproductive organs carry a
complete
set of genetic information that is passed to the
gametes
(see Figure 1.8b).
Twentieth-Century Genetics
The year 1900 was a watershed in the history of
genetics.
Gregor Mendel’s pivotal 1866 publication on
experiments
with pea plants, which revealed the principles of
heredity,
was “rediscovered,” as discussed in more detail in
Chapter 3.
The significance of his conclusions was recognized,
and
other biologists immediately began to conduct
similar genetic
studies on mice, chickens, and other organisms. The
results of these investigations showed that many
traits indeed
follow Mendel’s rules.
Walter Sutton (1877–1916) proposed in 1902 that
genes are located on chromosomes. Thomas Hunt Morgan
(1866–1945) discovered the first genetic mutant of
fruit flies
in 1910 and used fruit flies to unravel many details
of transmission
genetics. Ronald A. Fisher (1890–1962), John B. S.
Haldane (1892–1964), and Sewall Wright (1889–1988)
laid
the foundation for population genetics in the 1930s.
Geneticists began to use bacteria and viruses in the
1940s; the rapid reproduction and simple genetic
systems of
these organisms allowed detailed study of the
organization
and structure of genes. At about this same time,
evidence
accumulated that DNA was the repository of genetic
information.
James Watson (b. 1928) and Francis Crick (b. 1916)
described the three-dimensional structure of DNA in
1953,
ushering in the era of molecular genetics.
By 1966, the chemical structure of DNA and the
system
by which it determines the amino acid sequence of
proteins
had been worked out. Advances in molecular genetics
led to
the first recombinant DNA experiments in 1973, which
touched off another revolution in genetic research.
Walter
Gilbert (b. 1932) and Frederick Sanger (b. 1918)
developed
methods for sequencing DNA in 1977. The polymerase
chain reaction, a technique for quickly amplifying
tiny
amounts of DNA, was developed by Kary Mullis (b.
1944)
and others in 1986. In 1990, gene therapy was used
for the
first time to treat human genetic disease in the
United States
( FIGURE 1.11), and the Human Genome Project was
launched. By 1995, the first complete DNA sequence
of a
free-living organism—the bacterium Haemophilus
influenzae—
was determined, and the first complete sequence of a
eukaryotic organism (yeast) was reported a year
later. At the
beginning of the twenty-first century, the human
genome
sequence was determined, ushering in a new era in
genetics.
◗
Patient with
genetic disease
Cells
Virus containing
functional gene
1 Cells are removed
from the patient.
3 The cells are then grown
in a culture, tested…
4 …and implanted
into the patient.
2 A new or corrected version
of a gene is added to the
cell, usually with the use of
a genetically engineered virus.
1.11 Gene therapy applies genetic engineering to the
treatment of human diseases. ( J. Coate,
MDBD/Science VU/Visuals
Unlimited.)
◗
000 Chapter I
The Future of Genetics
The information content of genetics now doubles
every few
years. The genome sequences of many organisms are
added
to DNA databases every year, and new details about
gene
structure and function are continually expanding our
knowledge of heredity. All of this information
provides us
with a better understanding of numerous biological
processes and evolutionary relationships. The flood
of new
genetic information requires the continuous
development
of sophisticated computer programs to store,
retrieve, compare,
and analyze genetic data and has given rise to the
field
of bioinformatics, a merging of molecular biology
and
computer science.
In the future, the focus of DNA-sequencing efforts
will
shift from the genomes of different species to
individual differences
within species. It is reasonable to assume that each
person may some day possess a copy of his or her
entire
genome sequence. New genetic microchips that
simultaneously
analyze thousands of RNA molecules will provide
information
about the activity of thousands of genes in a
given cell, allowing a detailed picture of how cells
respond
to external signals, environmental stresses, and
disease
states. The use of genetics in the agricultural,
chemical, and
health-care fields will continue to expand; some
predict that
biotechnology will be to the twenty-first century
what the
electronics industry was to the twentieth century.
This everwidening
scope of genetics will raise significant ethical,
social, and economic issues.
This brief overview of the history of genetics is
not
intended to be comprehensive; rather it is designed
to provide
a sense of the accelerating pace of advances in
genetics.
In the chapters to come, we will learn more about
the
experiments and the scientists who helped shape the
discipline
of genetics.
More information about the
history of genetics
Basic Concepts in Genetics
Undoubtedly, you learned some genetic principles in
other
biology classes. Let’s take a few moments to review some
of
these fundamental genetic concepts.
Concepts
Developments in plant hybridization and cytology
in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries laid the
foundation for the field of genetics today. After
Mendel’s work was rediscovered in 1900, the
science of genetics developed rapidly and today is
one of the most active areas of science.
Cells are of two basic types: eukaryotic and
prokaryotic- Structurally, cells consist of two
basic
types, although, evolutionarily, the story is more
complex (see Chapter 2). Prokaryotic cells lack a
nuclear membrane and possess no membranebounded
cell organelles, whereas eukaryotic cells are
more complex, possessing a nucleus and
membranebounded
organelles such as chloroplasts and
mitochondria.
A gene is the fundamental unit of heredity- The
precise way in which a gene is defined often varies.
At
the simplest level, we can think of a gene as a unit
of
information that encodes a genetic characteristic.
We
will enlarge this definition as we learn more about
what genes are and how they function.
Genes come in multiple forms called alleles- A gene
that specifies a characteristic may exist in several
forms, called alleles. For example, a gene for coat
color in cats may exist in alleles that encode
either
black or orange fur.
Genes encode phenotypes- One of the most
important concepts in genetics is the distinction
between traits and genes. Traits are not inherited
directly. Rather, genes are inherited and, along
with
environmental factors, determine the expression of
traits. The genetic information that an individual
organism possesses is its genotype; the trait is its
phenotype. For example, the A blood type is a
phenotype; the genetic information that encodes the
blood type A antigen is the genotype.
Genetic information is carried in DNA and RNAGenetic
information is encoded in the molecular
structure of nucleic acids, which come in two types:
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid
(RNA). Nucleic acids are polymers consisting of
repeating units called nucleotides; each nucleotide
consists of a sugar, a phosphate, and a nitrogenous
base. The nitrogenous bases in DNA are of four types
(abbreviated A, C, G, and T), and the sequence of
these bases encodes genetic information. Most
organisms carry their genetic information in DNA,
but a few viruses carry it in RNA. The four
nitrogenous bases of RNA are abbreviated A, C, G,
and U.
Genes are located on chromosomes- The vehicles of
genetic information within the cell are chromosomes
( FIGURE 1.12), which consist of DNA and associated
proteins. The cells of each species have a
characteristic
number of chromosomes; for example, bacterial cells
normally possess a single chromosome; human cells
possess 46; pigeon cells possess 80. Each chromosome
carries a large number of genes.