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Mendelian Genetics

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Title: Mendelian Genetics


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  • An Austrian monk who worked with pea plants
  • Provided the foundation for modern genetics
  • Scientists understood that traits were inherited
    before they understood the mechanics of
    inheritance

3
Traits
  • Traits are distinguishing characteristics that
    are inherited.

4
Genetics
  • Genetics is the study of biological inheritance
    patterns and variations in organisms.

5
  • Mendel chose pea plants because they were quick
    to reproduce and he could control how they mated
    (model organisms)?
  • What is a model organism?

6
Purebred pea plants
  • Known to have one trait or another, no in
    betweens!!

7
Pea plant traits
  • He chose 7 traits to follow due to their
    either-or characteristics there were no
    intermediate features
  • Pea shape, pea color, pod shape, pod color, plant
    height, flower color, and flower position

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  • In genetics, the mating of two organisms is
    called a cross
  • The parents in a cross are called the P
    generation (parental generation)?
  • The offspring of that generation are called the
    F1 (first filial generation)?
  • When Mendel crossed purple flowered pea plants
    with white flowered pea plants, the F1 was all
    purple
  • When 2 offspring from the F1 were crossed, the
    resulting plants were purple and white (75
    purple and 25 white)?
  • 31 ratio

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  • 3 main conclusions from his work
  • (1) Demonstrated that traits are inherited as
    discrete units
  • Explained why individual traits in the peas did
    not blend or dilute over successive generations

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Law of segregation
  • (2 3) Collectively called the Law of
    Segregation
  • Organisms inherit 2 copies of each gene.
  • Where do those 2 copies come from?
  • Organisms donate only one copy of each gene in
    their gametes.

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  • A gene is a heritable factor that has a specific
    characteristic.
  • Each gene has a specific locus, or location on a
    pair of homologs.

15
Alleles
  • Alleles are alternative forms of a gene
  • Such as round or wrinkled peas, yellow or green
    peas, or purple or white flowers

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  • 2 alleles for each gene
  • Homozygous two of the same alleles
  • Heterozygous two different alleles

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  • Dominant allele the allele that is expressed
    usually represented by a capital letter
  • The letter B represents brown eyes ? BB or Bb
  • Homozygous dominant or heterozygous
  • Recessive allele the allele that is only
    expressed if the dominant allele is absent
    usually represented by a lowercase letter
  • The letter b represents blue eyes ? bb
  • Homozygous recessive
  • Are dominant alleles better or stronger than
    recessive alleles? Why or why not?

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  • The genome is all of the genetic material in an
    organism
  • In genetics, we often only focus on a single
    trait or a set of traits
  • 1. Genotype
  • 2. Phenotype

20
GENOTYPE
  • The genotype refers to the genetic makeup of a
    set of genes (what you don't see)?
  • Genes that code for flower color, such as PP or Pp

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PHENOTYPE
  • The phenotype refers to the physical
    characteristics/traits of the individual organism
    ( what you see)?
  • Purple flowers

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  • Because some alleles are dominant over others,
    two genotypes could produce the dominant
    phenotype
  • Brown hair ? HH or Hh
  • In order to express the recessive phenotype, the
    individual must also have the recessive genotype
  • Blonde hair ? hh
  • There are many factors that play a part in making
    one allele dominant over another

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  • Punnett Square a grid system for predicting the
    possible genotypes that result from a cross
  • Deals with probability
  • The likelihood that a particular event will occur
  • The alleles from the gametes of both parents are
    placed on the axes outside the grid while the
    possible genotypes of the offspring are inside
    the grid
  • Because segregation and fertilization are random
    events, each combination of alleles is just as
    likely as the next

25
  • Crosses that examine the inheritance of only one
    specific trait
  • Flower color in peas purple (P) is dominant to
    white (p)?
  • Cross a purebred purple flower with a purebred
    white flower. Determine the genotypes
    phenotypes of the F1 offspring. What is
    purple? What is white?
  • Cross 2 of the F1 offspring together. Determine
    the genotypes phenotypes of the F2 offspring.
    What is purple? What is white? What is the
    genotypic ratio? What is the phenotypic ratio?

26
  • Still using flower color
  • From the F2, cross a heterozygous flower with a
    homozygous recessive flower. Determine the
    genotypes phenotypes of the F3 offspring. What
    is purple? What is white? What is the
    phenotypic ratio? What is the genotypic ratio?
  • Testcross a cross between an organism of
    unknown genotype with an organism of the
    recessive genotype allows scientists to
    determine if the organism of unknown genotype is
    homozygous dominant or heterozygous

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  • Crosses involving two different traits-what size
    will your grid be?
  • One trait does not affect the presence of
    another known as the Law of Independent
    Assortment
  • Basically says that allele pairs separate
    independently during meiosis and are, therefore,
    inherited separately
  • Flower color and plant height in peas flower
    color is the same as before tall plants (T) are
    dominant to dwarf plants (t)?
  • Cross 2 organisms that are heterozygous for both
    traits.

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FOIL
  • TtPp x TtPp
  • Do one parent at a time, and place all of the
    genotypes on one side of your 16 square box.
  • First letter of each trait
  • Outside letter of each trait
  • Inside letter of each trait
  • Last letter of each trait
  • Now do the second parent in the same manner.
  • What is the probability that the plants will be
    tall and purple?
  • tall and white?
  • Short and purple?
  • Short and white?

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Practice Problems
  • Dihybrid Cross blue eyes and blonde hair are
    recessive
  • Bbhh X bbHh
  • Probability of offspring with Blue eyes and
    blonde hair?
  • Brown eyes and brown hair?

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Patterns of Inheritance
  • BIOLOGY

32
Mendels Principles
  • Mendel came up with certain principles keep
    these in mind with these new patterns of
    inheritance
  • Inheritance of biological characteristics is
    determined by genes which are passed from parents
    to offspring
  • Some form of a gene may be dominant or recessive
  • Each individual has 2 copies of a gene which will
    segregate during gametogenesis (Law of
    Segregation)
  • Alleles for different genes segregate
    independently from one another (Law of
    Independent Assortment)

33
Incomplete Dominance
  • Cases that result in one allele not being
    completely dominant over another allele
  • This means that the heterozygous phenotype is
    somewhere between the two homozygous phenotypes
  • Blending of phenotypes
  • Snapdragons exhibit incomplete dominance with
    flower color
  • Red flowers are RR
  • White flowers are WW
  • When a RR snapdragon is crossed with a WW
    snapdragon, the offspring are RW
  • Pink flowers are RW

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Codominance
  • Codominance - Cases in which both alleles
    contribute to the phenotype of the organism
  • Neither allele is dominant over the other
  • So, both phenotypes are expressed
  • RED x WHITE?RED AND WHITE

36
Multiple alleles
  • Multiple alleles Cases in which genes have more
    than 2 alleles that code for a trait
  • More than 2 alleles exist in a population, NOT in
    the individual
  • Human blood types (ABO) are codominant and have
    multiple alleles

37
IAIA or IAi Type A IAIB Type AB IBIB or IBi
Type B ii Type O
38
Practice Problem A homozygous type B woman
marries a heterozygous Type A man. Show the
punnett square, genotypes phenotypes
39
Sex linked disorders
Sex-linked genes are carried on the sex
chromosomes Males- XY Females-XX Most traits are
on the X-chromosome, which means that the female
has to get two copies of the gene to show a
genetic disorder. Males only have to get one
copy of the bad gene. Some examples of sex
linked genes are baldness, colorblindness,
hemophilia, Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
40
Practice Problem
Cross a white-eyed female fruit fly and red-eyed
male (White eyes are X-linked, recessive)
41
Red-green colorblindness
42
Polygenic Traits
  • Many traits are characterized by the interaction
    of several genes
  • Human skin color is determined by the interaction
    of 6 separate genes
  • Humans of the same race can have varying skin
    tones due to the interactions of the genes coding
    for skin color
  • Human eye color is also determined by 3 separate
    genes
  • Brown gt green gt blue
  • Only determines the color of the eyes, not the
    varying in eyes of the same color (dark brown
    eyes vs. light brown eyes)

43
Epistasis
  • A type of polygenic trait
  • Certain alleles code for a trait, but other
    alleles on different genes can affect whether or
    not a phenotype is expressed
  • Albinism is epistatic
  • One allele blocks the others in pigment
    production if it is expressed
  • Color of the coat in Labrador retrievers is a
    result of epistasis
  • Black coat color (B) is dominant to brown coat
    color (b)
  • Yellow coat color (e) is the recessive epistatic
    gene meaning it will block out all other coat
    colors if it is present
  • BBEE, BBEe, BbEE, BbEe black lab
  • bbEE bbEe chocolate lab
  • BBee, Bbee, bbee yellow lab

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Practice Problems
  • Incomplete Dominance
  • In northeast Kansas there is a creature known as
    a wildcat. It comes in three colors, blue, red,
    and purple. This trait is controlled by a single
    locus gene with incomplete dominance. A
    homozygous (BB) individual is blue, a homozygous
    (RR) individual is red, and a heterozygous (RB)
    individual is purple. What would be the genotypes
    and phenotypes of the offspring if a blue wildcat
    were crossed with a red one?

46
Practice Problems
  • Codominance
  • A cross between a black cat and a tan cat
    produces a tabby cat (black and tan fur)
  • What percentage of cats will have tan fur if a
    black cat is crossed with a tabby cat?
  • What percentage will have tabby fur if two tabby
    cats are crossed?

47
Practice Problems
  • Blood Typing
  • A male who has AB blood marries a female with
    Type A blood. Their child has type B blood. What
    is the moms genotype? Use a Punnett Square to
    explain your answer.
  • A male has type B blood and a female has type AB,
    if their child has type A, what is the dads
    genotype?

48
Practice Problems
  • Sex-linked Traits
  • A female with hemophilia mates with a normal
    male. Create a Punnett Square. What is the
    probability they will have a male with
    hemophilia? A female?
  • A female carrier of hemophilia mates with a male
    with hemophilia. Create a Punnett Square. What is
    the probability they will have a male with
    hemophilia? A female?
  • If a male is a hemophilic, which parent gave him
    the defective allele?
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