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Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
Lesson
09
GENES
AND EXPERIENCE
Objective:
·
To
understand the Brain behavior relationships from the perspectives of biological
systems.
In
this section of the module the students would go through and understand
Biological systems- their
genetic
basis and similarities with other animals. Mendelian Genetics. Where is the
genetic
programming
of behavior (if any) Watson Crick Model. What are the similarities and
differences
between
species, progenies of higher order animals, including
homosapien?
Mendelian
Genetics:
Based
on a series of studies which began accidentally when an Austrian Monk Gregor
Johannes Mendel
planted
sweet peas outside the monastery walls. He noticed a certain pattern in the
colors and then he
manipulated
the plantation, wherein the Mendelian genetic began through Pea studies. However
it
appears
that I may not have been that accidental as Mendel was following the readings of
Lamarkian
and
Darwinian theories.
In
1866, he drew the following conclusions:
Heredity
is transmitted by hereditable units.
When
both parents transmit the same trait it is expressed in the young offspring, but
when the
two
parents have a different gene, a hybrid form is established, which carries a
unique
combination
of traits.
Dominant
traits are traits that are expressed, whereas the recessive traits are inherited
but not
expressed
(they remain in the background and get expressed when the offspring gets a
recessive
gene
from both parents.
Experience
cannot affect the hereditary unit
(genes).
For
fifty years, Mendel's work
went unnoticed, but came
into eminence in the
1900's.
Hugo
de Vries added the concept of mutations which are characteristics accidental
created in the genetic
material
and then transmitted in the mutated form to the offspring.
Mutation
is defined as an inheritable change in
the genetic material, not
reshuffling of the old
gene
material/combination.
It could be genetic mutation: change in
only one gene or chromosomal
mutation:
which
is change in the chromosomal
combinations.
Immediately
after fertilization the cells start
dividing. When the cells divide, the
chromosomes also
reproduce
in the zygote (fertilized cell).
Cell division is meiosis
(within each cell of parents
which
produces
the gamates), mitosis is the process of
cell division which takes
place in the zygote).
The
two genes at one location
are known as alleles. If the
alleles are same at the same
location (from
two
parents ), then the newly
formed zygote is homozygous for
that gene. However, when
two different
paris
of genes or alleles in the same
location i.e. a different
allele from the father or
mother, then the
gene
is heterozygous ( where one become
dominant and the other
recessive)
DNA
Heredity
is transferred through DNA:
deoxyribonucleic acid. DNA is found
only in the cell
nucleus
(and
it stays there), it is most stable, and
is self-replicating. It is composed of
basic components i.e.
30
Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
simple
sugars (deoxyribose) phosphates
and four nucleotide bases:
Adenine, Guanine, Thymine
and
Cytosine),
Watson
and Crick broke the DNA molecule
code, which is double helix
model. Each consists of
two
strands
wound around each other
like a rope of two strands
and these are attached to
chains of
phosphates
and deoxyribose (like a
ladder). The four nucleotide
bases, adenine, thymine, guanine
and
cytosine
are in permanent combinations where adenine
always bonds with thymine
and guanine with
cytosine
(AT, GC).
DNA
replicates itself during cell
division, the sequence is remembered,
and copies made. When the
cell
is
replicating the DNA strand unwinds
itself. One strand remains
stable while the other breaks
up. One
pair
of the bases in these strands
also separate, while one
base of each pair remains
attached to each
strand
(look at the figure to see
how it opens up). A
continuous sugar phosphate
sugar phosphate
chain
supports this double helix
strand. Two identical strands
are then created. This
self replicating
process
continues (sometimes things can go
wrong- mutations can occur to
change the DNA sequence).
How
is heredity transferred when DNA does
not leave the nucleus, how is
heredity transferred?
The
required proteins are manufactured
and metabolized in the ribosomes, the
message of genetic
code
and
materials needed is sent through the
Ribonucleic acid which is
similar to DNA. Therefore the
code
can
be transferred and transcripted by the RNA. The RNA
which does this is called
the messenger RNA
or
mRNA which carries the
genetic code from the
nucleus of the cell to the ribosomes in
the cell soma.
The
Transfer RNA t RNA transfers the
needed amino acids for
manufacturing to the ribosomes.
The
kinds
of proteins made and when
they are made determine
whether the organism is male or
female,
human
or ape or drosophilia, tree or flower. If
flower what color? What
height etc?
Behaviors
and Genes
Behaviour
genetics is the specialization which
aims to identify the genetic
basis of behavior.
Genes:
are arranged in a linear sequence
along the chromosome.
Alleles:
are genes occurring a given
location Homozygous if both pairs of
genes at same location
carry
same
(brown eyes, heterozygous if different
genes on same site. If different
then one is dominant, and
the
other remains
recessive.
Dominance
is the tendency for one type of
characteristic to express itself;
however, this is affected by
a
number
of factors such as sex e.g. the same
gene may be dominant for
males and recessive for
females
(baldness).
The
continuous shuffling and reshuffling of
chromosomes during reproduction
leads to genetic
variation
in
the population on which the natural
selection can work.
Example:
If
we have a dominant homozygous gene of sickle cell anemia in African American the
receiver cannot
survive
beyond infancy ( in this case both parent had to have recessive genes for this
condition where
the
red
blood cell Is shaped like a sickle and does not have a normal
shape
Sickle
cell was a beneficial selection in Africa, especially for malaria infested
areas, where this lead to
adaptation
and ensure greater survival rates. This did not work when they moved to colder
climates such
31
Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
as
the USA where greater levels oxygen was needed and the sickle shaped red blood
cell was deficient.
The
survival in high altitudes is challenging even if the trait is
recessive.
Genetic
variability vs. In breeding
Genetic
variability is important as it increases gene pool, thereby making a wider range
of different
genes
available. This increases the chances of transmission of healthier genes and
lowers the chances of
bad
recessive genes from showing up as in cousin marriages where because of in
breeding behavioral
and
other defects are expressed and have devastating effects on families. Why? The
gene pool is
restricted
and the same gene pool is used again and again. Thus genetic variability is
beneficial as it can
a)
lead to the development of a new species through sexual recombinations, natural
selection and even
mutations,
b) ensure survival of existing species when the environment changes, there is
need to change/
to
adapt to the changes in the environment e.g. African slaves with sickle cell
anemia in cold America,
those
survived who were heterozygous for this gene.
The
inheritance of traits is also linked to the sex chromosome or the distribution
of sex chromosomes (
gene
follow the distribution of the sex chromosomes). There are several different
ways in which the
transmission
follows the sex chromosomal distribution.
1
Sex Linked traits
This
means that the sex inherited is also linked to traits that are inherited. When
traits are located on a
gene
which is carried on the X chromosome it is said to be sex linked. The chromosome
Y is small and
carries
very few genes. In sex linked trait, the X chromosome carries genes for the
trait along with the
sex.
Thus it is determined by following the X distribution. This does not mean that
these characteristics
are
linked to male or female sex, it is only X linked, thus it would go wherever the
X on which this gene
is
located, goes). Sex linked is X linked.
As
we already know that the Male has one of each XY chromosme, and females have two
XX
chromosomes,
if there are two XX's then trait carried by the X can be overcome in competition
(cannot
express
itself). However, in males since there is only one X, so the defective gene
expresses itself. In
males
the X chromosome contains genes which are lacking in Y; therefore the traits on
it are expressed.
Thus
in Males these characteristics are expressed, whereas in females there are not.
This can happen
only
if both XX's have it, then the trait is, expressed. The following traits are sex
linked:
·
Hemophilia,
·
Colorblindness,
·
Huntington's
chorea
·
Turner's
syndrome (this has XO, i.e. one missing sex chromosome, no YO found
yet).
These
are transmitted from the mother's X to sons it is expressed and if transmitted
to daughter's
recessive
it remains recessive.
Two
important characteristics of Sex linked traits:
a)
The incidence is higher in males
b)
it is never transmitted from male parent to male offspring
2.
Sex Influenced Traits
The
trait is inherited and transmitted equally by both sexes; however sex determines
the dominance,
(gene
dominant in one sex and remains recessive in the other). The two famous examples
are the white
32
Neurological
Basis of Behavior (PSY -
610)
VU
forelock,
and baldness.
Characteristics
of sex influenced traits:
a)
It is more common in men than women (not sex linked as the father's gene is
transmitted equally to
sons
and daughters, whereas in sex linked father did not pass on any genes to
sons).
b)
The trait shows up in men when neither mother nor father shows it (double
recessive).
c)
Shows up in all the sons of a woman who has the trait.
3.
Sex Limited
When
traits are expressed in one but not in the other sex. These characteristics are
carried by the sex
genes
as well as other genes. However these require the right amount of hormones for
expression. It is
not
necessarily complete dominance always; it can be incomplete sex limited trait.
Reproduction only
is
only found in females, and in men there is growth of hair on ears with age and
beards. The sex not
genes
which condition the expression of these traits, Montague (1954) reported that
albinism was more
in
males 95 as compared to 5 females (incomplete sex limited). Similarly
alkeptonuria (black urine) a
disorder
of the breakdown of phenylalanine also occurs more in males than
females
References:
1.
Kalat J.W (1998) Biological
Psychology Brooks/ Cole
Publishing
2.
Carlson N.R. (2005) Foundations of
Physiological Psychology Allyn and Bacon,
Boston
3.
Pinel, John P.J. (2003)
Biopsychology (5th edition) Allyn and Bacon
Singapore
4
Bloom F, Nelson and Lazerson (2001),
Behavioral Neuroscience: Brain, Mind and
Behaviors (3rd
edition)
Worth Publishers New
York
5.
Bridgeman, B (1988) The
Biology of Behaviour and Mind. John
Wiley and Sons New
York
.
Note:
References
#2, 3, and 4 are followed
most closely, as they have
been used in teaching as
well;
further
individual references/pages are
also given on the power
points of each lesson
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