Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781259700903
Author: Leland Hartwell Dr., Michael L. Goldberg Professor Dr., Janice Fischer, Leroy Hood Dr.
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 11, Problem 9P

In 2015, an international team of scientists assembled the complete genome sequences of two different woolly mammoths. Both specimens were discovered buried in the permafrost of Siberia, the coldest inhabited place on earth. Through radiocarbon dating, it was determined that one of the mammoths, found on Wrangel Island off the Siberian coast, died about 4000 years ago; the other mammoth, found in the town of Oimyakon, died about 45,000 years ago.

Analysis revealed that the genome sequences of these two animals differed significantly in the distribution of base pairs at which they are either homozygous or heterozygous. The Wrangel Island woolly mammoth had an extreme excess of runs of homozygosity (ROHs), regions in which the animal was homozygous for all of the base pairs. About 23.4% of the Wrangel Island animal’s genome was composed of ROHs that were greater than 500 kb in length; some of these ROHs were in excess of 5 Mb long. In contrast, only 0.83% of the Oimyakon animal’s genome consisted of ROHs longer than 500 kb.

a. Explain how polymorphisms are detected when sequencing a genome. How would researchers know, for any particular base pair, whether a genome is homozygous or heterozygous?
b. What does the extreme excess of ROHs in the Wrangel Island mammoth genome suggest about that animal’s parents?
c. The Wrangel Island woolly mammoth is thought to have belonged to the last population on earth before the species went extinct about 4000 years ago. The answer to part (b) suggests one possible reason for the woolly mammoth’s extinction. Explain.
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. In 2015, an international team of scientists assembledthe complete genome sequences of two differentwoolly mammoths. Both specimens were discoveredburied in the permafrost of Siberia, the coldest inhabited place on earth. Through radiocarbon dating, itwas determined that one of the mammoths, found onWrangel Island off the Siberian coast, died about4000 years ago; the other mammoth, found in thetown of Oimyakon, died about 45,000 years ago.Analysis revealed that the genome sequences ofthese two animals differed significantly in the distribution of base pairs at which they are either homozygous or heterozygous. The Wrangel Island woollymammoth had an extreme excess of runs of homozygosity (ROHs), regions in which the animal was homozygous for all of the base pairs. About 23.4% ofthe Wrangel Island animal’s genome was composed ofROHs that were greater than 500 kb in length; someof these ROHs were in excess of 5 Mb long. In contrast, only 0.83% of the Oimyakon animal’s genomeconsisted of…
James Noonan and his colleagues (J. Noonan et al. 2005. Science 309:597–599) set out to study the genome sequence of an extinct species of cave bear. They extracted DNA from 40,000-year-old bones from a cave bear and used a metagenomic approach to isolate, identify, and sequence the cave-bear DNA. Why did they use a metagenomic approach when their objective was to sequence the genome of one species (the cave bear)?
The human genome contains more than a million copies of the Alu transposable element. Comparative genomics reveals that the Alu element is found only in the clade of mammals that includes primates, tree shrews,rodents, and rabbits. a. What does the observation that the Alu transposon is limited to this clade reveal about its origin and method of spread among species? b. At many sites in the genome, an Alu element is present in humans but absent in chimpanzees, while at many other sites an Alu element is present in chimpanzees but absent in humans. What are two hypotheses that could explain this situation? For any particular site,how could the hypotheses be distinguished?

Chapter 11 Solutions

Genetics: From Genes to Genomes

Ch. 11 - Prob. 11PCh. 11 - The previous problem raises several interesting...Ch. 11 - You want to make a recombinant DNA in which a PCR...Ch. 11 - You sequence a PCR product amplified from a...Ch. 11 - Prob. 15PCh. 11 - The trinucleotide repeat region of the Huntington...Ch. 11 - Sperm samples were taken from two men just...Ch. 11 - Prob. 18PCh. 11 - a. It is possible to perform DNA fingerprinting...Ch. 11 - On July 17, 1918, Tsar Nicholas II; his wife the...Ch. 11 - The figure that follows shows DNA fingerprint...Ch. 11 - Microarrays were used to determine the genotypes...Ch. 11 - A partial sequence of the wild-type HbA allele is...Ch. 11 - a. In Fig. 11.17b, PCR is performed to amplify...Ch. 11 - The following figure shows a partial microarray...Ch. 11 - Scientists were surprised to discover recently...Ch. 11 - The microarray shown in Problem 25 analyzes...Ch. 11 - The figure that follows shows the pedigree of a...Ch. 11 - One of the difficulties faced by human geneticists...Ch. 11 - Now consider a mating between consanguineous...Ch. 11 - The pedigree shown in Fig. 11.22 was crucial to...Ch. 11 - You have identified a SNP marker that in one large...Ch. 11 - The pedigrees indicated here were obtained with...Ch. 11 - Approximately 3 of the population carries a mutant...Ch. 11 - The drug ivacaftor has recently been developed to...Ch. 11 - In the high-throughput DNA sequencing protocol...Ch. 11 - A researcher sequences the whole exome of a...Ch. 11 - As explained in the text, the cause of many...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.26 portrayed the analysis of Miller...Ch. 11 - A research paper published in the summer of 2012...Ch. 11 - Table 11.2 and Fig. 11.27 together portray the...Ch. 11 - The human RefSeq of the entire first exon of a...Ch. 11 - Mutations in the HPRT1 gene in humans result in at...Ch. 11 - Prob. 44P
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