{"id":67828,"date":"2016-05-16T23:44:41","date_gmt":"2016-05-17T03:44:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/genetics-britannica-com\/"},"modified":"2016-05-16T23:44:41","modified_gmt":"2016-05-17T03:44:41","slug":"genetics-britannica-com","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/human-genetics\/genetics-britannica-com\/","title":{"rendered":"genetics | Britannica.com"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Genetics, chromosomeCreated    and produced by QA International.  QA International, 2010. All    rights reserved.    <a href=\"http:\/\/www.qa-international.comstudy\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.qa-international.comstudy<\/a> of        heredity in general and of genes in particular.    Genetics forms one of the central pillars of     biology and overlaps with many other areas such as    agriculture,     medicine, and     biotechnology.  <\/p>\n<p>    Since the dawn of civilization, humankind has recognized the    influence of     heredity and has applied its principles to the    improvement of cultivated crops and domestic animals. A    Babylonian tablet more than 6,000 years old, for example, shows        pedigrees of horses and indicates possible inherited    characteristics. Other old carvings show cross-pollination    of date palm trees. Most of the mechanisms of heredity,    however, remained a mystery until the 19th century, when    genetics as a systematic     science began.  <\/p>\n<p>    Crick,    Francis Harry Compton: proposed DNA    structureEncyclopdia    Britannica, Inc.Genetics arose out of    the identification of genes, the fundamental units responsible    for heredity. Genetics may be defined as the study of genes    at all levels, including the ways in which they act in the    cell    and the ways in which they are transmitted from parents to    offspring. Modern genetics focuses on the chemical substance    that genes are made of, called deoxyribonucleic acid, or        DNA, and the ways in which it affects the chemical    reactions that constitute the living processes within the        cell. Gene action depends on interaction with the    environment. Green plants,    for example, have genes containing the information necessary to    synthesize the photosynthetic pigment chlorophyll    that gives them their green colour. Chlorophyll is synthesized    in an environment containing light because the     gene for chlorophyll is expressed only when it    interacts with light. If a     plant is placed in a dark environment, chlorophyll    synthesis stops because the gene is no longer expressed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Genetics as a scientific discipline stemmed from the work of    Gregor    Mendel in the middle of the 19th century. Mendel    suspected that traits were inherited as discrete units, and,    although he knew nothing of the physical or chemical nature of    genes at the time, his units became the basis for the    development of the present understanding of heredity. All    present research in genetics can be traced back to Mendels    discovery of the laws governing the inheritance of traits. The    word genetics was introduced in 1905 by English    biologist William    Bateson, who was one of the discoverers of Mendels    work and who became a champion of Mendels principles of    inheritance.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although scientific evidence for patterns of genetic    inheritance did not appear until Mendels work, history shows    that humankind must have been interested in heredity long    before the dawn of civilization. Curiosity must first have been    based on human family resemblances, such as similarity in body    structure, voice, gait, and gestures. Such notions were    instrumental in the establishment of family and royal    dynasties. Early     nomadic tribes were interested in the qualities of    the animals that they herded and domesticated and, undoubtedly,    bred selectively. The first human settlements that practiced    farming appear to have selected     crop plants with favourable qualities. Ancient tomb    paintings show racehorse breeding pedigrees containing clear    depictions of the inheritance of several distinct physical    traits in the horses. Despite this interest, the first recorded    speculations on heredity did not exist until the time of the    ancient Greeks; some aspects of their ideas are still    considered relevant today.  <\/p>\n<p>        Hippocrates (c. 460c. 375    bce), known as the father    of     medicine, believed in the inheritance of acquired    characteristics, and, to account for this, he devised the    hypothesis known as pangenesis.    He postulated that all organs of the body of a parent gave off    invisible seeds, which were like miniaturized building    components and were transmitted during sexual intercourse,    reassembling themselves in the mothers womb to form a baby.  <\/p>\n<p>    Aristotle    (384322 bce) emphasized    the importance of blood    in heredity. He thought that the blood supplied generative    material for building all parts of the adult body, and he    reasoned that blood was the basis for passing on this    generative power to the next generation. In fact, he believed    that the males semen was purified blood and that a womans    menstrual blood was her equivalent of semen. These male and    female contributions united in the womb to produce a baby. The    blood contained some type of hereditary essences, but he    believed that the baby would develop under the influence of    these essences, rather than being built from the essences    themselves.  <\/p>\n<p>    Aristotles ideas about the role of blood in procreation were    probably the origin of the still prevalent notion that somehow    the blood is involved in heredity. Today people still speak of    certain traits as being in the blood and of blood lines and    blood ties. The Greek model of inheritance, in which a    teeming multitude of substances was invoked, differed from that    of the Mendelian model. Mendels idea was that distinct    differences between individuals are determined by differences    in single yet powerful hereditary factors. These single    hereditary factors were identified as genes. Copies of genes    are transmitted through     sperm and egg and guide the development of the    offspring. Genes are also responsible for reproducing the    distinct features of both parents that are visible in their    children.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the two millennia between the lives of     Aristotle and     Mendel, few new ideas were recorded on the nature of        heredity. In the 17th and 18th centuries the idea of    preformation was introduced. Scientists using the newly    developed     microscopes imagined that they could see miniature    replicas of human beings inside sperm heads. French biologist    Jean-Baptiste    Lamarck invoked the idea of the inheritance of    acquired characters, not as an explanation for heredity but as    a model for     evolution. He lived at a time when the fixity of    species was taken for granted, yet he maintained that this    fixity was only found in a constant environment. He enunciated    the law of use and disuse,    which states that when certain organs become specially    developed as a result of some environmental need, then that    state of development is hereditary and can be passed on to    progeny. He believed that in this way, over many generations,        giraffes could arise from deerlike animals that had    to keep stretching their necks to reach high leaves on trees.  <\/p>\n<p>    British naturalist     Alfred Russel Wallace originally postulated the    theory of     evolution by     natural selection. However,     Charles Darwins observations during his    circumnavigation of the globe aboard the HMS     Beagle (183136) provided evidence for        natural selection and his suggestion that humans and    animals shared a common ancestry. Many scientists at the time    believed in a hereditary mechanism that was a version of the    ancient Greek idea of pangenesis, and Darwins ideas did not    appear to fit with the theory of heredity that sprang from the    experiments of Mendel.  <\/p>\n<p>    Before     Gregor Mendel, theories for a hereditary mechanism    were based largely on logic and speculation, not on    experimentation. In his monastery garden, Mendel carried out a    large number of cross-pollination    experiments between variants of the garden pea, which he    obtained as pure-breeding lines. He crossed peas with yellow    seeds to those with green seeds and observed that the progeny    seeds (the first generation, F1) were all yellow. When the    F1 individuals were    self-pollinated or crossed among themselves, their progeny    (F2) showed a ratio of    3:1 (3\/4 yellow and 1\/4 green). He deduced that, since the    F2 generation    contained some green individuals, the determinants of greenness    must have been present in the F1 generation, although they were    not expressed because yellow is dominant over green. From the    precise mathematical 3:1 ratio (of which he found several other    examples), he deduced not only the existence of discrete    hereditary units (genes) but also that the units were present    in pairs in the pea plant and that the pairs separated during        gamete formation. Hence, the two original lines of    pea plants were proposed to be YY (yellow)    and yy (green). The gametes from these were    Y and y, thereby producing an F1 generation of    Yy that were yellow in colour because of the        dominance of Y. In the F1 generation, half the gametes    were Y and the other half were y, making the    F2 generation produced    from random mating 1\/4 Yy, 1\/2    YY, and 1\/4 yy, thus    explaining the 3:1 ratio. The forms of the pea colour genes,    Y and y, are called alleles.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mendel also analyzed pure lines that differed in pairs of    characters, such as seed colour (yellow versus green) and seed    shape (round versus wrinkled). The cross of yellow round seeds    with green wrinkled seeds resulted in an F1 generation that were all yellow    and round, revealing the dominance of the yellow and round    traits. However, the F2 generation produced by    self-pollination of F1    plants showed a ratio of 9:3:3:1 (9\/16 yellow round, 3\/16    yellow wrinkled, 3\/16 green round, and 1\/16 green wrinkled;    note that a 9:3:3:1 ratio is simply two 3:1 ratios combined).    From this result and others like it, he deduced the independent    assortment of separate gene pairs at     gamete formation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mendels success can be attributed in part to his classic    experimental approach. He chose his experimental organism well    and performed many controlled experiments to collect data. From    his results, he developed brilliant explanatory hypotheses and    went on to test these hypotheses experimentally. Mendels    methodology established a prototype for genetics that is still    used today for gene discovery and understanding the genetic    properties of inheritance.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mendels genes were only hypothetical entities, factors that    could be inferred to exist in order to explain his results. The    20th century saw tremendous strides in the development of the    understanding of the nature of     genes and how they function. Mendels publications    lay unmentioned in the research literature until 1900, when the    same conclusions were reached by several other investigators.    Then there followed hundreds of papers showing Mendelian    inheritance in a wide array of plants and animals, including    humans. It seemed that Mendels ideas were of general validity.    Many biologists noted that the inheritance of genes closely    paralleled the inheritance of     chromosomes during nuclear divisions, called        meiosis, that occur in the cell divisions just prior    to     gamete formation.  <\/p>\n<p>    heredity:    sex-linked inheritance in Drosophila fliesEncyclopdia Britannica,    Inc.It seemed that genes were parts of    chromosomes. In 1910 this idea was strengthened through the    demonstration of parallel inheritance of certain Drosophila    (a type of fruit fly) genes on sex-determining chromosomes by    American zoologist and geneticist Thomas    Hunt Morgan. Morgan and one of his students,    Alfred    Henry Sturtevant, showed not only that certain genes    seemed to be linked on the same     chromosome but that the distance between genes on    the same chromosome could be calculated by measuring the    frequency at which new chromosomal combinations arose (these    were proposed to be caused by chromosomal breakage and reunion,    also known as crossing    over). In 1916 another student of Morgans, Calvin    Bridges, used fruit flies with an extra chromosome    to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the only way to explain    the abnormal inheritance of certain genes was if they were part    of the extra chromosome. American geneticist Hermann    Joseph Mller showed that new alleles (called    mutations)    could be produced at high frequencies by treating cells with        X-rays, the first demonstration of an environmental    mutagenic agent (mutations can also arise spontaneously). In    1931 American botanist Harriet Creighton and American scientist    Barbara    McClintock demonstrated that new allelic    combinations of linked genes were correlated with physically    exchanged chromosome parts.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1908 British physician Archibald    Garrod proposed the important idea that the human    disease alkaptonuria,    and certain other hereditary diseases, were caused by inborn    errors of     metabolism, suggesting for the first time that    linked genes had molecular action at the cell level.     Molecular genetics did not begin in earnest until    1941 when American geneticist     George Beadle and American biochemist     Edward Tatum showed that the genes they were    studying in the fungus Neurospora crassa acted by    coding for catalytic proteins called     enzymes. Subsequent studies in other organisms    extended this idea to show that genes generally code for        proteins. Soon afterward, American bacteriologist        Oswald Avery, Canadian American geneticist Colin M.    MacLeod, and American biologist     Maclyn McCarty showed that bacterial genes are made    of     DNA, a finding that was later extended to all    organisms.  <\/p>\n<p>    DNAEncyclopdia    Britannica, Inc.A major landmark was    attained in 1953 when American geneticist and biophysicist    James    D. Watson and British biophysicists Francis    Crick and Maurice    Wilkins devised a double helix model for DNA    structure. This model showed that DNA was capable of    self-replication by separating its complementary strands and    using them as templates for the synthesis of new DNA molecules.    Each of the intertwined strands of DNA was proposed to be a    chain of chemical groups called     nucleotides, of which there were known to be four    types. Because proteins are strings of     amino acids, it was proposed that a specific        nucleotide sequence of DNA could contain a code for    an     amino acid sequence and hence     protein structure. In 1955 American molecular    biologist     Seymour Benzer, extending earlier studies in        Drosophila, showed that the mutant sites    within a gene could be mapped in relation to each other. His    linear map indicated that the gene itself is a linear    structure.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1958 the strand-separation method for DNA replication    (called the semiconservative    method) was demonstrated experimentally for the first time by    American molecular biologist     Matthew Meselson and American geneticist     Franklin W. Stahl. In 1961 Crick and South African    biologist Sydney    Brenner showed that the     genetic code must be read in triplets of    nucleotides, called codons.    American geneticist Charles    Yanofsky showed that the positions of mutant sites    within a gene matched perfectly the positions of altered amino    acids in the amino acid sequence of the corresponding protein.    In 1966 the complete     genetic code of all 64 possible triplet coding units    (codons), and the specific amino acids they code for, was    deduced by American biochemists Marshall    Nirenberg and Har    Gobind Khorana. Subsequent studies in many organisms    showed that the double helical structure of DNA, the mode of    its replication, and the genetic code are the same in virtually    all organisms, including     plants,     animals,     fungi,     bacteria, and viruses.    In 1961 French biologist Franois    Jacob and French biochemist Jacques    Monod established the prototypical model for gene    regulation by showing that bacterial genes can be turned on    (initiating     transcription into     RNA and protein synthesis) and off through the    binding action of regulatory proteins to a region just upstream    of the coding region of the gene.  <\/p>\n<p>    Technical advances have played an important role in the advance    of genetic understanding. In 1970 American microbiologists    Daniel    Nathans and Hamilton    Othanel Smith discovered a specialized class of    enzymes (called restriction    enzymes) that cut DNA at specific nucleotide target    sequences. That discovery allowed American biochemist Paul    Berg in 1972 to make the first artificial    recombinant DNA molecule by isolating DNA molecules from    different sources, cutting them, and joining them together in a    test tube. These advances allowed individual genes to be    cloned    (amplified to a high copy number) by splicing them into    self-replicating DNA molecules, such as plasmids    (extragenomic circular DNA elements) or viruses, and inserting    these into living bacterial cells. From these methodologies    arose the field of     recombinant DNA technology that presently dominates        molecular genetics. In 1977 two different methods    were invented for determining the nucleotide sequence of DNA:    one by American molecular biologists Allan Maxam and     Walter Gilbert and the other by English biochemist        Fred Sanger. Such technologies made it possible to    examine the structure of genes directly by nucleotide    sequencing, resulting in the confirmation of many of the    inferences about genes originally made indirectly.  <\/p>\n<p>    DNA    fingerprinting: polymerase chain reactionEncyclopdia Britannica,    Inc.In the 1970s Canadian biochemist    Michael    Smith revolutionized the art of redesigning genes by    devising a method for inducing specifically tailored mutations    at defined sites within a gene, creating a technique known as    site-directed    mutagenesis. In 1983 American biochemist     Kary B. Mullis invented the     polymerase chain reaction, a method for rapidly    detecting and amplifying a specific DNA sequence without        cloning it. In the last decade of the 20th century,    progress in     recombinant DNA technology and in the development of    automated sequencing machines led to the elucidation of    complete DNA sequences of several viruses,     bacteria, plants, and animals. In 2001 the complete    sequence of human DNA, approximately three billion nucleotide    pairs, was made public.  <\/p>\n<p>    A time line of important milestones in the history of genetics    is provided in the table.  <\/p>\n<p>          Time line of important milestones in the history of          genetics        <\/p>\n<p>        Classical genetics, which remains the foundation for    all other areas in genetics, is concerned primarily with the    method by which genetic traitsclassified as     dominant (always expressed), recessive    (subordinate to a dominant    trait), intermediate (partially expressed), or polygenic (due    to multiple genes)are transmitted in plants and animals. These    traits may be sex-linked (resulting from the action of a gene    on the sex, or X, chromosome) or autosomal (resulting from the    action of a gene on a chromosome other than a sex chromosome).    Classical genetics began with Mendels study of inheritance in    garden peas and continues with studies of inheritance in many    different plants and animals. Today a prime reason for    performing     classical genetics is for gene discoverythe finding    and assembling of a set of genes that affects a biological    property of interest.  <\/p>\n<p>        Cytogenetics, the microscopic study of chromosomes,    blends the skills of cytologists,    who study the structure and activities of     cells, with those of geneticists, who study genes.    Cytologists discovered     chromosomes and the way in which they duplicate and    separate during     cell division at about the same time that    geneticists began to understand the behaviour of genes at the    cellular level. The close correlation between the two    disciplines led to their combination.  <\/p>\n<p>    Plant     cytogenetics early became an important subdivision    of cytogenetics because, as a general rule, plant chromosomes    are larger than those of animals. Animal cytogenetics became    important after the development of the so-called squash    technique, in which entire cells are pressed flat on    a piece of glass and observed through a     microscope; the human chromosomes were numbered    using this technique.  <\/p>\n<p>    Today there are multiple ways to attach molecular labels to    specific genes and chromosomes, as well as to specific RNAs and    proteins, that make these molecules easily discernible from    other components of cells, thereby greatly facilitating    cytogenetics research.  <\/p>\n<p>    bacterial    genetics: use of robotsUniversity College Cork, Ireland (A    Britannica Publishing    Partner)Microorganisms were generally    ignored by the early geneticists because they are small in size    and were thought to lack variable traits and the sexual        reproduction necessary for a mixing of genes from    different organisms. After it was discovered that    microorganisms have many different physical and physiological    characteristics that are amenable to study, they became objects    of great interest to geneticists because of their small size    and the fact that they reproduce much more rapidly than larger    organisms.     Bacteria became important model organisms in genetic    analysis, and many discoveries of general interest in genetics    arose from their study. Bacterial genetics is the centre of    cloning technology.  <\/p>\n<p>    Viral genetics is another    key part of     microbial genetics. The genetics of     viruses that attack bacteria were the first to be    elucidated. Since then, studies and findings of viral genetics    have been applied to viruses pathogenic on plants and animals,    including humans. Viruses are also used as vectors (agents that    carry and introduce modified genetic material into an organism)    in DNA technology.  <\/p>\n<p>    Molecular genetics is the study of the molecular structure of        DNA, its cellular activities (including its    replication), and its influence in determining the overall    makeup of an organism. Molecular genetics relies heavily on        genetic engineering (recombinant    DNA technology), which can be used to modify    organisms by adding foreign DNA, thereby forming transgenic    organisms. Since the early 1980s, these techniques have been    used extensively in basic biological research and are also    fundamental to the     biotechnology industry, which is devoted to the    manufacture of agricultural and medical products. Transgenesis    forms the basis of gene therapy, the attempt to cure     genetic disease by addition of normally functioning    genes from exogenous sources.  <\/p>\n<p>    The development of the technology to sequence the DNA of whole    genomes    on a routine basis has given rise to the discipline of        genomics, which dominates genetics research today.        Genomics is the study of the structure, function,    and evolutionary comparison of whole genomes. Genomics has made    it possible to study gene function at a broader level,    revealing sets of genes that interact to impinge on some    biological property of interest to the researcher. Bioinformatics    is the computer-based discipline that deals with the analysis    of such large sets of biological information, especially as it    applies to genomic information.  <\/p>\n<p>    The study of genes in populations of animals, plants, and    microbes provides information on past     migrations, evolutionary relationships and extents    of mixing among different varieties and species, and methods of        adaptation to the environment. Statistical methods    are used to analyze gene distributions and chromosomal    variations in populations.  <\/p>\n<p>        Population genetics is based on the mathematics of    the frequencies of alleles and of genetic types in populations.    For example, the Hardy-Weinberg    formula, p2 + 2pq +    q2 = 1,    predicts the frequency of individuals with the respective    homozygous dominant (AA), heterozygous    (Aa), and homozygous recessive    (aa) genotypes in a randomly mating    population. Selection,     mutation, and random changes can be incorporated    into such mathematical models to explain and predict the course    of evolutionary change at the population level. These methods    can be used on alleles of known phenotypic effect, such as the    recessive     allele for albinism,    or on DNA segments of any type of known or unknown function.  <\/p>\n<p>    Human    population geneticists have traced the origins and migration    and invasion routes of modern humans,     Homo sapiens. DNA comparisons between the    present peoples on the planet have pointed to an African origin    of Homo sapiens. Tracing specific forms of genes has    allowed geneticists to deduce probable migration routes out of    Africa to the areas colonized today. Similar studies show to    what degree present populations have been mixed by recent    patterns of travel.  <\/p>\n<p>    Another aspect of genetics is the study of the influence of    heredity on behaviour.    Many aspects of animal    behaviour are genetically determined and can    therefore be treated as similar to other biological properties.    This is the subject material of     behaviour genetics, whose goal is to determine which    genes control various aspects of behaviour in animals. Human    behaviour is difficult to analyze because of the powerful    effects of environmental factors, such as culture. Few cases of    genetic determination of complex human behaviour are known.    Genomics studies provide a useful way to explore the genetic    factors involved in complex human traits such as behaviour.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some geneticists specialize in the hereditary processes of        human genetics. Most of the emphasis is on    understanding and treating genetic disease and genetically    influenced ill     health, areas collectively known as medical    genetics. One broad area of activity is laboratory research    dealing with the mechanisms of human gene function and    malfunction and investigating     pharmaceutical and other types of treatments. Since    there is a high degree of evolutionary conservation between    organisms, research on model organismssuch as bacteria, fungi,    and fruit flies (Drosophila)which    are easier to study, often provides important insights into    human gene function.  <\/p>\n<p>    Many single-gene diseases, caused by mutant alleles of a single    gene, have been discovered. Two well-characterized single-gene    diseases include     phenylketonuria (PKU) and     Tay-Sachs disease. Other diseases, such as heart    disease,     schizophrenia, and depression, are thought to have    more complex heredity components that involve a number of    different genes. These diseases are the focus of a great deal    of research that is being carried out today.  <\/p>\n<p>    Another broad area of activity is clinical genetics, which    centres on advising parents of the likelihood of their children    being affected by genetic    disease caused by mutant genes and abnormal    chromosome structure and number. Such genetic    counseling is based on examining individual and    family medical records and on diagnostic procedures that can    detect unexpressed, abnormal forms of genes. Counseling is    carried out by physicians with a particular interest in this    area or by specially trained nonphysicians.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>See original here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.britannica.com\/science\/genetics\" title=\"genetics | Britannica.com\">genetics | Britannica.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Genetics, chromosomeCreated and produced by QA International. 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