How can we ascertain the number of polygenes involved in the inheritance of a quantitative trait?
Verified step by step guidance
1
Understand that polygenes are multiple genes that contribute small additive effects to a quantitative trait, resulting in continuous variation rather than discrete categories.
Recognize that to estimate the number of polygenes, geneticists often use statistical methods based on the phenotypic variance observed in different generations (such as parents, F1, F2, and backcrosses).
Collect phenotypic data from controlled crosses and calculate the variance components, including environmental variance and genetic variance, to isolate the genetic contribution to the trait.
Apply the Castle-Wright estimator formula, which estimates the minimum number of effective factors (polygenes) as:
\[\text{Number of polygenes} = \frac{(P_1 - P_2)^2}{8(V_{F2} - V_E)}\]
where \(P_1\) and \(P_2\) are the mean phenotypic values of the two parental lines, \(V_{F2}\) is the variance in the F2 generation, and \(V_E\) is the environmental variance.
Interpret the result as an estimate of the minimum number of polygenes influencing the trait, keeping in mind that this method assumes equal and additive gene effects without dominance or epistasis.
Verified video answer for a similar problem:
This video solution was recommended by our tutors as helpful for the problem above
Video duration:
57s
Play a video:
Was this helpful?
Key Concepts
Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
Polygenic Inheritance
Polygenic inheritance refers to the control of a trait by multiple genes, each contributing a small effect. Unlike single-gene traits, polygenic traits show continuous variation, such as height or skin color, because the combined effect of many genes influences the phenotype.
Quantitative traits are measurable characteristics that vary continuously in a population. Their variation results from the additive effects of multiple genes and environmental factors, making it necessary to analyze phenotypic distributions to understand the genetic basis.
Statistical Methods to Estimate Number of Polygenes
Methods like the Castle-Wright estimator use phenotypic variance from parental, F1, and F2 generations to estimate the minimum number of polygenes involved. These approaches rely on assumptions about gene effects and help quantify the genetic complexity underlying quantitative traits.