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Gregor Mendel The Wonder Monk

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Normally peas self pollinate = male pollen fertilizes female's egg of ... horse's coat color: heterozygous = roan color where they have both white and red ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gregor Mendel The Wonder Monk


1
Gregor MendelThe Wonder Monk
2
Gregor Mendel
  • Father of genetics
  • studied characteristics of peas
  • Normally peas self pollinate male pollen
    fertilizes females egg of same flower
  • He cross-pollinated seeds 2 different flowers

3
Mendel
  • Mendel experimented with pea plants that
    reproduce sexually through pollination
  • self-pollination
  • cross-pollination

4
Genetics - Study of heredity
  • Heredity - passing characteristics from parent to
    offspring
  • Fertilization-male and female gametes combine to
    form new offspring (children)
  • Pollination (in plants) pollen grains fertilize
    female gamete
  • Self-pollination
  • Cross-pollination

5
Genetics Terms
  • purebred
  • same characteristic from generation to generation
    (ex. Purebred dogs horses)
  • hybrid
  • crossing parents with different characteristics
    (mut)

6
Genes
  • Factors (or piece of DNA) that determine a
    characteristic

7
Trait
  • Characteristic
  • Ex eye color, hair color, height, etc

8
Alleles
  • Different forms of a gene
  • Ex blue, brown, green eye color
  • Ex tall or short alleles for height
  • Organisms have 2 alleles for each gene
  • (1 on each chromosome from each parent!)
  • Let T tall and t short since same gene
    (only 2 alleles) lets use the same letter

9
Genetics Terms
  • homozygous
  • 2 of the same alleles for a trait
  • T tall (TT)
  • t dwarf (tt)
  • heterozygous
  • 2 different alleles for a trait
  • Tt

10
Dominant
  • Trait observed even if another allele is present
    ex TT and Tt both appear tall
  • Homozygous dominant or heterozygous
  • Capital letter
  • Usually more common but not always

Recessive
  • NOT seen if other versions are present
  • Only expressed if homozygous recessive tt
  • designated with a lower case letter

11
Genetics Terms
  • Phenotype
  • Physical, visible characteristics
  • Genotype
  • Genetic makeup of an organism (capital and
    lowercase letters)

Phenotype Tall Genotype TT
12
Questions
  • Is TT homozygous or heterozygous?
  • What is the phenotype?
  • What would the heterozygous genotype be?
  • What would be the phenotype for a plant that has
    a heterozygous genotype?
  • Can you have a heterozygous recessive?

Tall dominant TT or Tt dwarf recessive tt
ONLY there can never be heterozygous recessive!
13
Genetics Terms
  • Parental generation
  • P1
  • parents
  • First filial generation
  • F1
  • Offspring
  • Monohybrid cross
  • mating between individuals looking at 1 trait

14
Product Rule of Probability
  • Probability of 2 events happening simultaneously
    the product of the probabilities of the 2
    happening separately
  • Ex. Flipping a coin ( ½ heads, ½ tails), rolling
    a die ( 1/6 rolling a 1,2,3,4,5,6)

15
Punnett Squares
P generation
  • List allele combinations for female on top and
    for male on the side
  • Fill in (combine) to get all genotype
    combinations possible for the offspring

16
How To Set Up a Punnett Square
17
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18
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19
How To Set Up a Punnett Square
20
Mendels Findings
  • 2 factors controlling each trait
  • 1. a dominant (A) and a recessive (a) form
  • 2. the presence of the dominant masked the
    recessive
  • 3. each of these forms is called an allele
  • Law of segregation- a pair of factors is
    separated or segregated during the formation of
    gametes (meiosis)
  • Law of independent assortment- factors for
    different traits are distributed independently
    from one another

21
Monohybrid (1 trait) Cross
AA X AA
A
A
AA
AA
A
A
AA
AA
Genotypic ratio all AA
Phenotypic ratio all red
22
AA X Aa
A
A
AA
AA
A
a
Aa
Aa
Genotypic ratio 1AA1Aa
Phenotypic ratio all red
23
AA X aa
A
A
Aa
Aa
a
a
Aa
Aa
Genotypic ratio all Aa
Phenotypic ratio all red
24
Aa X Aa
A
a
AA
Aa
A
a
aa
Aa
aa
Genotypic ratio 1 AA2Aa1aa
Phenotypic ratio 3 red1 white
25
Aa X aa
A
a
Aa
aa
Aa
a
Aa
a
aa
Aa
Genotypic ratio 1 Aa1 aa
Phenotypic ratio 1 red 1white
26
aa X aa
a
a
aa
aa
a
a
aa
aa
Genotypic ratio all aa
Phenotypic ratio all white
27
Dihybrid Cross
  • dihybrid cross
  • between individuals with 2 pairs of traits

28
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29
Dihybrid Cross Rules
  • First figure out what the gametes are that the
    parents can make. Use the FOIL method to do this.
  • Parents AaBb X AaBb
  • Gametes AB, Ab, aB, ab X AB, Ab, aB, ab
  • Then place the gametes along the top and sides of
    the square and do the cross.

30
Dihybrid cross
X
31
TtRr X TtRr
32
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33
Test Cross
  • Used to determine an unknown genotype by crossing
    the unknown with a homozygous recessive
  • genotypic ratios of the offspring will tell what
    the unknowns genotype was

34
Complete Dominance vs. Incomplete Dominance
  • Most traits display complete dominance
  • the presence of 1 dominant allele masks the
    recessive allele
  • Some traits display incomplete dominance
  • the heterozygous condition results in a separate
    phenotype, neither allele is completely
    dominant-the traits blend together
  • Ex.In some flowers, AA is red, Aa is pink, and aa
    is white

35
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36
Codominance
  • Some traits are controlled by codominance
  • both alleles for a gene are expressed in
    heterozygous offspring
  • neither allele is dominant or recessive, nor do
    they blend each is expressed equally
  • Ex. horses coat color heterozygous roan color
    where they have both white and red hairs
  • AB blood type is another example

37
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38
Polygenic Traits
  • More than 1 gene determines a trait
  • Ex. skin color in humans and height

39
Sex Determination
  • During embryonic development, the genes on the X
    chromosome turn on first and all sex parts
    begin development as a female
  • At some point in men, the X turns off and the Y
    turns on ? the sex parts develop as a male
  • Problems in this process can create
    hermaphrodites (persons with both sex parts).
  • There are many mutations that arise from the
    segregation of sex chromosomes into gametes
  • Klinefelters syndrome (XXY or XXXY) sterile
    male, 47-48 chromosomes
  • Turners syndrome (X0) sterile female, 45
    chromosomes
  • Triplo X/ Meta-female (XXX) sterile female, 47
    chromosomes

40
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41
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42
Sex-Linked Genes
  • The presence of a gene on a sex chromosome makes
    the gene sex-linked
  • The X chromosome is much larger than the Y, so in
    men there is a difference in the number of genes
    carried on the sex chromosomes.
  • There are many disorders that are carried on the
    X chromosome
  • if the mother is recessive for these traits she
    can pass the disorder to her son b/c his only X
    is from the mother? that allele is expressed
  • there is no corresponding gene on the Y to cover
    the recessive X allele.
  • Some of these disorders are muscular dystrophy,
    colorblindness, hemophilia, and baldness

43
Sex Chromosomes
XN
Xn
Xn
Site of the gene for colorblindness
No corresponding site on the Y
Y
Colorblind Man-XnY
Non Colorblind Woman-XNXn
44
Sex Influenced Traits
  • Traits expressed differently in males and females
  • Example baldness

BB Bb bb
male
bald bald not bald
bald not bald not bald
female
45
Pedigrees
  • Females are circles, males are squares
  • The recessive trait is shaded, the dominant trait
    is white
  • A horizontal line b/w 2 individuals marriage
  • A vertical line bracket offspring
  • Roman numerals generation

46
Rules for Pedigrees
  • Label all recessive (shaded) individuals (Ex. aa)
  • Label all dominant (non-shaded) individuals (Ex.
    A_)
  • Begin at the bottom with the 1st recessive
    individual and work backwards to determine
    whether dominant individuals are AA or Aa
  • Note You may not be able to tell if some
    dominant individuals are homozygous or
    heterozygous until they have more kids!

47
Rules for Sex-Linked Pedigrees
  • Label all females X X and all males X Y
  • Fill in all recessive individuals using a
    lowercase superscript (Ex. XnY or XnXn)
  • Fill in all dominant individuals using a capital
    superscript (Ex. XNY or XNX-)
  • Y will never have an allele (superscript)
  • Start with recessive individuals at the bottom
    and work backwards to determine the genotypes of
    the dominant individuals
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