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Mendel

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Title: Mendel s Laws of Heredity Author: Newport News Last modified by: PUSD Created Date: 11/5/2003 7:25:12 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mendel


1
Mendels Laws of Heredity
  • Why we look the way we look...

2
What is heredity?
  • The passing on of characteristics (traits) from
    parents to offspring
  • Genetics is the study of heredity

3
Inheritance Theory Prior to Mendel
  • 1. Traits blended
  • Trait characteristics to be passed from parent
    to offspring
  • bloodlines thought traits passed through the
    blood
  • 2. Problem with blending cannot account for
    unexpected traits

4
Mendel- Father of Genetics
  • Personal history
  • 1. Austrian monk
  • 2. Teacher of high school natural science- love
    of evolution, nature, meteorology
  • 3. for the fun of it crossed peas and mice-
    saw inheritance patterns
  • 4. pea plants- a formal test

5
Mendel used peas because
  • They reproduce sexually
  • They have two distinct, male and female, sex
    cells called gametes
  • Their traits are distinctive and easy to isolate
  • Reproduce quickly

6
Mendel crossed them
  • Fertilization - the uniting of male and female
    gametes
  • Cross - combining gametes from parents with
    different traits

7
Steps of Mendel's Experiment
8
What Did Mendel Find?
  • He discovered different laws and rules that
    explain factors affecting heredity.

9
 Mendel studied the inheritance of one trait (for
example plant's height, color of  flowers or
color and shape of seeds). A cross in which only
one trait is studied is called a monohybrid
cross.
10
Mendel first cross pollinated tall pea plants
,identified asTT (height of plants in this
variety were about six feet tall ), with each
other.
11
Mendel noticed, that only tall plants were
produced. He came to a conclusion, that the
tall variety of a pea plant, must contain some
factor for tallness.
12
X
He then crossed short with short and the result
was all short.
Once again he concluded that pea plant must
contain some factor for height
13
The next step of Mendel's experimentwas to cross
tall pea plants (TT) withshort pea plants (tt).
The resulting plants were labeled Tt And only
tall plant were produced
14
Mendels next experiment involved allowing the
tall plants from the tall short cross to self
pollinate. The result was a mixture of tall and
short plants
15
Mendel named each generation Starting
generation P (parent) generation. The
following offspring generation was called F1
- first filial generation F2 - second filial
generation, and so on.
16
P
F1
F2
17
Mendel experimented with many traits
The results of the crosses were always the same.
18
  • When pure bred plants were crossed
  • the offspring always had the trait of
  • the parents.
  • When two different alleles for a
  • trait were crossed the offspring
  • always showed the dominant trait.
  • When the offspring of the previous
  • were allowed to self pollinate the
  • recessive trait showed up again.

19
Rule of Unit Factors
  • Each organism has two alleles for each trait one
    from each parent
  • -Alleles - different forms
  • of the same gene
  • -Genes - located on chromosomes, they control
    how an organism develops

20
Rule of Dominance
Some genes (alleles) are dominant and others are
recessive. The phenotype (trait) of a dominant
gene will be seen when it is paired with a
recessive gene.
TT Tt both result in a TALL plant, because T is
dominant over t. t is recessive. tt will result
in a short plant.
21
Law of Segregation
  • Each gene (allele) separates from the other so
    that the offspring get only one gene from each
    parent for a given trait.

TT x tt
22
Law of Independent Assortment
  • The genes for different traits are inherited
    independent of each other.

23
Phenotype Genotype
  • Phenotype - the way an organism looks
  • red hair or brown hair
  • genotype - the gene combination of an organism
  • AA or Aa or aa

24
Phenotype
  • Phenotype
  • Physical characteristics

25
Genotype
  • Phenotype
  • Physical characteristics
  • Genotype
  • Genes we inherit from our parents

26
Heterozygous Homozygous
  • Heterozygous - if the two alleles for a trait are
    different (Aa)
  • Homozygous - if the two alleles for a trait are
    the same (AA or aa)

27
Questions...
  • How many alleles does an organism have for each
    trait?
  • What is an allele?
  • How many alleles does a parent pass on to each
    offspring for each trait

28
Questions...
  • What do we call the trait that is observed?
  • What case (upper or lower) is it written in?
  • What about the one that disappears?
  • What case is it written in?

29
Punnett Square
Many years later a method of showing the crosses
was developed. It is referred to as the Punnett
Square and shows the probability of the offspring
having a certain trait.
30
Punnett Squares

t Tt
Tt Tt
The genes from one parent go here.
The genes from the other parent go here.
31
Punnett Squares
T T
t T
t T T
32
Punnett Squares
T T
t t Tt
t Tt Tt
33
Punnett Squares
T T
t t Tt
t Tt Tt
34
Punnett Squares
T T
t Tt Tt
t Tt Tt
35
Punnett Squares
T T
t Tt Tt
t Tt Tt
36
Punnett Squares
T T
t Tt Tt
t Tt Tt
T
T
T
37
Punnett Squares
T T
t Tt Tt
t Tt Tt
T
T
T
Offspring
38
Punnett Squares
T T
t Tt Tt
t Tt Tt
F1 generation
39
Interpreting the Results
The genotype for all the offspring is Tt. The
genotype ratio is Tt - 4/4 The phenotype for
all the offspring is tall. The phenotype ratio
is tall - 4/4
40
Punnett Squares
T t
T ?? ??
t ?? ??
41
Punnett Squares
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
F2 generation
42
Next, give the genotype and ratios
of the offspring (F2 generation).
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
43
Punnett Squares
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
Genotype ratio TT 1/4
44
Punnett Squares
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
Genotype ratio TT - 1, Tt 2/4
45
Punnett Squares
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
Genotype ratio TT 1/4, Tt 2/4, tt 1/4
46
Next, give the phenotype ratios of the
offspring (F2 generation).
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
47
Punnett Squares
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
Genotype ratio TT 1/4, Tt 2/4, tt 1/4
Phenotype ratio Tall 3/4
48
Punnett Squares
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
Genotype ratio TT 1/4, Tt 2/4, tt 1/4
Phenotype ratio Tall 3/4, short 1/4
49
This is a monohybrid cross. We worked with only
one trait. The height of the plant.
T t
T TT Tt
t Tt tt
50
We crossed two pea plants which contained both
tall and short information.
51
Questions...
  • What is the phenotype?
  • What is the genotype?
  • What is homozygous?
  • What is heterozygous?
  • What is monohybrid crossing?

52
Patterns of Inheritance
  • Dominant /Recessive
  • Codominance
  • Incomplete Dominance
  • Multiple Alleles
  • Polygenic
  • X-Linked
  • Maternal

53
Dominant/Recessive
  • Trait is controlled by two alleles one of the
    alleles is dominant , the other recessive.
  • Example the height of pea plants

54
Codominance
  • The alleles are neither dominant nor
  • recessive both alleles are expressed
  • in the offspring
  • A hybrid will have a mixture of the alleles,
  • not just one or the other.
  • Symbols for codominant alleles are special
  • Example of chicken feather color
  • (FB black feathers)(FW white feathers)

55
Incomplete Dominance
  • The alleles for a trait blend .
  • An example would be a red flower is
    crossed with a white flower and the resulting
    plant produces pink flowers.

56
Multiple Alleles
  • The trait is controlled by genes that have more
    than two alleles
  • The organism inherits only two of the alleles
  • Example Human Blood Types A, B, O
  • Alleles IA, IB, and i

57
Polygenic Inheritance
  • More than one pair of genes determine the
    phenotype.
  • Many phenotypes are possible
  • Example Height, skin color

58
Sex-Liked Inheritance
  • Genes controlling sex of an organism (X,Y) are
    not identical in length.
  • The X chromosome is longer than the Y and
    therefore contains more genes.
  • Males receive only one set of those genes from
    their mother.
  • If a recessive allele is received there is no
    dominant to block it.

59
Maternal Inheritance
  • Mitochondrial DNA is inherited from mothers
    because the egg cell has the mitochondria in it

60
Genetic Disorders
  • Can be caused by mutations in the genes
  • Genetic disorder can result in minor or major
    health problems
  • Examples Cystic Fibrosis, Huntingtons Disease,
    Sickle-cell Disease, Hemophilia, and Down Syndrome
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