BIOL239 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Chromosome

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Set 9: Map distances
Limitations of two point crosses:
oIn crosses involving genes lying close together, it may be difficult to determine
the correct order (a bc vs. a cb)
oThe actual distances on the map do not always add up for genes that are far apart
– a single two point cross is not accurate for determining the distance between
genes that are far away from each other
Would have to do a series of crosses using the genes that lie between, OR
Three point crosses
oA faster, more accurate method for mapping genes, through the simultaneous
analysis of three marker genes
oAllows correction for double crossovers (count them twice)
oParental class will be the two with the highest frequencies; all others are
recombinants
oNext two highest frequencies will be single crossover recombinants between the
two most distant adjacent genes
Interference
oThe number of double crossovers may be less than expected – sometimes a
crossover in one region of the chromosome will reduce the likelihood of a
crossover in an adjacent part of the chromosome
oNot uniform, and may vary for different regions of the chromosome
oA quantitative measure of the amount of interference in a particular chromosomal
region is first obtained by calculating the coefficient of coincidence
oCoefficient of coincidence = frequency observed/frequency expected
oInterference = 1 – coefficient of coincidence
1. Parental class will be the two with the highest frequency. All others are recombinants.
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