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Mendelian%20Patterns%20of%20Inheritance

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Mendelian Patterns of Inheritance Chapter 11 If a persons genotype is EE, what percentage of their gametes (produced by meiosis) would contain the recessive allele ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mendelian%20Patterns%20of%20Inheritance


1
Mendelian Patterns of Inheritance
  • Chapter 11

2
Heredity
  • Heredity- passing of traits from parent to
    offspring
  • Traits- characteristics that are inherited
  • hair color, height, blood type, susceptibility to
    a certain disease (diabetes, depression, obesity,
    breast cancer)
  • Genetics- the study of heredity

3
Gregor Mendel
  • Austrian monk who formulated fundamental laws of
    heredity in early 1860s
  • Studied science and mathematics at University of
    Vienna
  • Conducted breeding experiments with the garden
    pea (Pisum sativum)
  • Gathered and documented mathematical data from
    his experiments

4
Mendels Experiments
  • Garden Pea
  • Easy to cultivate
  • Short generation time
  • Cross-pollination by hand

5
Mendels Experiments
6
Self-Pollination
  • Involves having
  • the pollen (male
  • sperm) be directly
  • deposited on the
  • female section of
  • the flower

7
Cross- Pollination
  • Requires the
  • removal of the male
  • stamen (makes
  • pollen) on 1st flower
  • and transferring the
  • pollen from a
  • different flower
  • to the first one

8
Blending Inheritance
  • Prior to Mendel, most breeders believed parents
    of contrasting appearance always produce
    offspring of intermediate appearance
  • No knowledge of cells/chromosomes
  • Based on the idea that offspring have traits of
    both parents
  • Reappearance of traits attributed to genetic
    instability

9
Mendels Experiments
  • Studied mathematical trends in breeding patterns
  • Looked at simple discrete traits
  • Mendels experiments helped him formulate the
    particulate theory of inheritance
  • Inheritance involves reshuffling of genes from
    generation to generation

10
One-Trait Inheritance
  • Mendel performed cross-breeding experiments
    between true-breeding plants
  • True-breeding parents with a certain trait
    consistently pass that trait to every offspring
    (homozygous)
  • Chose varieties that differed in only one trait
    (monohybrid cross)

11
Results of Mendels cross of true breeding short
with a true breeding tall pea plant
12
Mendel saw the same results in different traits
13
One-Trait Inheritance
  • Performed reciprocal crosses individuals
    pollinate one another
  • Parental generation P
  • First generation offspring F1
  • Second generation offspring F2
  • Formulated law of segregation

14
Law of Segregation
  • Each individual has two factors for each trait
  • The factors segregate during gamete formation
  • Each gamete contains only one factor from each
    pair of factors
  • Fertilization gives each new individual two
    factors for each trait

15
Law of Segregation

16
Mendels Monohybrid Cross
17
Mendels Monohybrid Cross
18
Alleles on homologous chromosomes
  • These alternative forms of a gene that code for a
    trait are called alleles. There are 2 alleles
    for each trait 1 allele for a trait is from mom
    and 1 allele is from dad.

19
Homologous Chromosomes
20
Principle of Dominance
  • Dominant allele (capital letter) masks the
    expression of the recessive allele (lower-case)
  • Alleles occur on a homologous pair of chromosomes
    at a particular gene locus (location of gene on
    the chromosome)
  • Homozygous identical alleles (TT, tt)
  • Heterozygous different alleles (Tt)

21
Genotype Vs. Phenotype
  • Genotype
  • Refers to the alleles an individual receives at
    fertilization
  • If alleles are identical, genotype is homozygous
  • If alleles are different, genotype is
    heterozygous
  • Phenotype
  • Refers to the physical appearance of the
    individual

22
Practice
  • In humans, the ability to taste the bitterness
    of PTC paper is dominant (T) to not being able to
    taste the bitterness of PTC paper (t).

GENOTYPE GENOTYPE IN SCIENCE TERMS PHENOTYPE



23
Punnett Square
  • All possible genotypes of sperm are lined up on
    one axis, and all possible genotypes of eggs are
    lined up on the other axis
  • Every possible combination of alleles (zygote
    genotypes) placed within the squares

24
Formative Assessment
  • Get your clickers!

25
Alternate forms of a gene are called
  1. Chromosomes
  2. Alleles
  3. Gametes
  4. Heterozygotes

26
Only one ________ allele is needed in order for
that trait to be expressed in the phenotype.
  1. Recessive
  2. Dominant
  3. Heterozygous
  4. Homozygous

27
Which of the following genotypes is homozygous
recessive?
  1. RR
  2. Rr
  3. rr

28
The genotype TT is
  1. Homozygous recessive
  2. Homozygous dominant
  3. Heterozygous

29
Which of the following genotypes is heterozygous?
  1. BB
  2. Bb
  3. bb

30
Brown eyes (B) are dominant over blue eyes (b).
Mr. Mallin has blue eyes. What is his genotype?
  1. BB
  2. Bb
  3. bb

31
Brown eyes (B) are dominant over blue eyes (b).
Channing Tatum has brown eyes. What is his
genotype?
  1. BB
  2. Bb
  3. bb
  4. BB or Bb

32
Brown eyes (B) are dominant over blue eyes (b).
Assume Mr. Ward is homozygous dominant for brown
eyes. What is his sons phenotype?
  1. Brown eyes
  2. Blue eyes
  3. Bb
  4. BB

33
Free earlobes (E) are dominant over attached
earlobes (e). Ms. Palmeris phenotype is free
earlobes and her genotype is heterozygous (Ee).
Which of these statements is true?
  1. Both of her parents have attached ear lobes
  2. At least one of her parents has free earlobes
  3. Both of her parents are homozygous recessive

34
If a persons genotype is EE, what percentage of
their gametes (produced by meiosis) would contain
the recessive allele?
  1. 100
  2. 50
  3. 25
  4. 0

35
The previous question is a direct application of
which of Mendels laws?
  1. Law of independent assortment
  2. Law of Homozygous Dominance
  3. Law of Segregation
  4. Principle of Dominance

36
Testcross
  • A monohybrid testcross is used to determine if an
    individual with the dominant phenotype is
    homozygous dominant or heterozygous for a
    particular trait
  • Individuals with recessive phenotype always have
    the homozygous recessive genotype
  • However, Individuals with dominant phenotype have
    indeterminate genotype
  • May be homozygous dominant, or
  • Heterozygous

37
Testcross
38
Dihybrid Cross
39
Dihybrid Cross
40
Two-Trait Testcross
  • A two-trait testcross is used to determine if an
    individual is homozygous dominant or heterozygous
    for either of the two traits

41
Two-Trait Testcross
42
Law of Independent Assortment
  • Pairs of alleles for different traits separate
    independently of one another during gamete
    formation (meiosis).
  • In other words the inheritance of one trait has
    no influence on the inheritance of another trait.

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