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3.7: Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance

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    59012
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    The speculation that chromosomes might be the key to understanding heredity led several scientists to examine Mendel’s publications and re-evaluate his model in terms of the behavior of chromosomes during mitosis and meiosis. In 1902, Theodor Boveri observed that proper embryonic development of sea urchins does not occur unless chromosomes are present. That same year, Walter Sutton observed the separation of chromosomes into daughter cells during meiosis. Together, these observations led to the development of the Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance, which identified chromosomes as the genetic material responsible for Mendelian inheritance.

    The Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance was consistent with Mendel’s laws and was supported by the following observations:

    • During meiosis, homologous chromosome pairs migrate as discrete structures that are independent of other chromosome pairs.
    • The sorting of chromosomes from each homologous pair into pre-gametes appears to be random.
    • Each parent synthesizes gametes that contain only half of their chromosomal complement.
    • Even though male and female gametes (sperm and egg) differ in size and morphology, they have the same number of chromosomes, suggesting equal genetic contributions from each parent.
    • The gametic chromosomes combine during fertilization to produce offspring with the same chromosome number as their parents.

    Despite compelling correlations between the behavior of chromosomes during meiosis and Mendel’s abstract laws, the Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance was proposed long before there was any direct evidence that traits were carried on chromosomes. Critics pointed out that individuals had far more independently segregating traits than they had chromosomes. It was only after several years of carrying out crosses with the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, that Thomas Hunt Morgan provided experimental evidence to support the Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance.

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    3.7: Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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