Gregor Mendel’s Discoveries Pre-Mendel Blending Theory of Heredity –Hereditary material from...

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Gregor Mendel’s Discoveries Pre-Mendel Blending Theory of Heredity Hereditary material from each parent mixes in the offspring 2 problems Individuals of a population should reach a uniform appearance after many generations Once traits are blended, they can’t be separated Gregor Mendel Particulate Theory of Heredity Traits are inherited as separate factors

Transcript of Gregor Mendel’s Discoveries Pre-Mendel Blending Theory of Heredity –Hereditary material from...

Gregor Mendel’s Discoveries• Pre-Mendel Blending Theory of

Heredity– Hereditary material from each

parent mixes in the offspring• 2 problems• Individuals of a population should

reach a uniform appearance after many generations

• Once traits are blended, they can’t be separated

• Gregor Mendel Particulate Theory of Heredity

– Traits are inherited as separate factors

• Mendel used quantitative approach

• Studied peas for 3 reasons:– Many varieties– Self pollinating/cross pollinating– Each variety had 2 alternative

forms

• Used true breeding varieties • Used large sample sizes and

accurate observations• Used math to develop

probabilities and perform statistical analyses

• Used terms to define generations as: P, F1, F2

• Developed terms such as:– Alleles (factor)– Dominant/Recessive– Homozygous/ Heterozygous– Phenotype/Genotype– Testcross

• Derived 2 principles:– Law of segregation – two alleles for a character

separate when gametes are formed

Law of Independent assortment – each pair of alleles segregate into gametes independently

Degrees of Dominance

• Complete dominance occurs when phenotypes of the heterozygote and dominant homozygote are identical

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Fig. 14-9

Rr RrSegregation of

alleles into eggs

Sperm

R

R

R RR

R rrr

r

r

r1/2

1/2

1/2

1/2

Segregation ofalleles into sperm

Eggs1/4

1/4

1/41/4

Fig. 14-16

Parents

Normal Normal

Sperm

Eggs

NormalNormal(carrier)

Normal(carrier) Albino

Aa Aa

A

AAA

Aa

a

Aaaa

a

Fig. 14-17

Eggs

Parents

Dwarf Normal

Normal

Normal

Dwarf

Dwarf

Sperm

Dd dd

dD

Dd dd

ddDd

d

d

• Dominant condition• Fatal• Only one Huntington’s

allele needed• Produces abnormal

protein that clumps up in cell nuclei – especially nerve cells in the brain

If an allele for tall plants (T) is dominant to short plants (t), what offspring would youexpect from a TT x Tt cross?

A. ½ tall; ½ shortB. ¾ tall; ¼ shortC. All tall

Concept Quiz

Identify vocab term:

• This allele gets masked in the phenotype

• Genetic Makup

• Alternate forms of a gene

• The allele that gets fully expressed

• Two identical alleles for a trait

• Physical appearance

If two heterozygotes are crossed for dimpled chin. What will be the expected genotypic ratio?

Phenotypic ratio?

• 1:2:1

• 3:1

Extending Mendelian Genetics for a Single Gene

• Inheritance of characters by a single gene may deviate from simple Mendelian patterns in the following situations:– When alleles are on the sex chromosomes– When alleles are not completely dominant or

recessive– When a gene has more than two alleles– When a gene produces multiple phenotypes

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

• In codominance, phenotypes of both alleles are exhibited in the heterozygote

• Affects 1 in 2500 individuals in European populations

Fig. 14-10-1

Red

P Generation

Gametes

WhiteCRCR CWCW

CR CW

Fig. 14-10-2

Red

P Generation

Gametes

WhiteCRCR CWCW

CR CW

F1 GenerationPinkCRCW

CR CWGametes 1/21/2

In incomplete dominance, the phenotype of F1 hybrids is somewhere between the phenotypes of the two parental varieties

Fig. 14-10-3

Red

P Generation

Gametes

WhiteCRCR CWCW

CR CW

F1 GenerationPinkCRCW

CR CWGametes 1/21/2

F2 Generation

Sperm

Eggs

CR

CR

CW

CW

CRCR CRCW

CRCW CWCW

1/21/2

1/2

1/2

Incomplete Dominance

Concept Quiz A red carnation and a white carnationproduce offspring that are all pink. The typeof inheritance pattern occurring is:

A. Complete dominanceB. Incomplete dominanceC. Codominance

Red is dominant to white in flower petal color. If a homozygous dominant is crossed

with a homozygous recessive and this inheritance is incomplete dominance. What

will be the phenotypic ratio of this cross?

• 1:2:1

Fur color in rabbits shows incomplete dominance.FBFB individuals are brown, FBFW individuals arecream, FWFW individuals are white. What is theexpected ratio of a FBFW x FWFW cross?

A. 3 white : 1 brownB. 3 white : 1 creamC. 2 white : 2 cream

Concept Quiz

Multiple Alleles

• Most genes exist in populations in more than two allelic forms

• For example, the four phenotypes of the ABO blood group in humans are determined by three alleles for the enzyme (I) that attaches A or B carbohydrates to red blood cells: IA, IB, and i.

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 14-11

IA

IB

i

A

B

none(a) The three alleles for the ABO blood groups and their associated carbohydrates

Allele Carbohydrate

GenotypeRed blood cell

appearancePhenotype

(blood group)

IAIA or IA i A

BIBIB or IB i

IAIB AB

ii O

(b) Blood group genotypes and phenotypes

Who is the universal recipient?Who is the universal donor?

What blood types would the offspring have if one parentIs type O and one parent is AB? Both parents AB?

Pleiotropy The ability of a gene to affect an organism in many ways

Fig. 14-12

BbCc BbCc

Sperm

EggsBC bC Bc bc

BC

bC

Bc

bc

BBCC

1/41/4

1/41/4

1/4

1/4

1/4

1/4

BbCC BBCc BbCc

BbCC bbCC BbCc bbCc

BBCc BbCc

BbCc bbCc

BBcc Bbcc

Bbcc bbcc

9 : 3 : 4

Epistasis

• B = Black• b = Brown• C = Pigment• c = nonpig

A gene at one locusAlters a gene at another locus

Polygenic Inheritance

• Additive effect of 2 or more genes on a single phenotypic character

• Eye color, skin color

Identify each type of inheritance?• Both alleles are expressed in heterozygote• More than two alleles are possible for a trait• The dominant allele masks the recessive

allele• Additive effect of two or more genes• Intermediate phenotype in heterozygotes• A gene at one locus controls a gene at

another locus

Quantitative Genetics

• The environment plays a role – traits such as height, weight, musical ability, susceptibility to cancer,and intelligence

• Quantitative traits show continuous variation; we can see a large range of phenotypes in the population

• The amount of variation in a population is called variance

Genetically the same butPhenotypically different

Nutrition, exercise, and exposure to sun can cause differences in phenotypes

Diversity in Offspring

• Mutation, independent assortment, crossing over, and random fertilization result in unique combinations of alleles

• These processes produce the diversity of individuals found in humans and all other sexually reproducing biological populations

• You are one out of 64 trillion genetically different children that your parents could produce

• Fraternal (non-identical)– dizygotic: two

separate fertilized eggs

– not genetically the same

• Identical

– monozygotic: one single fertilized egg that separates

– genetically the same

Sex Determination andSex Linkage

• Some genes are on the X chromosome and are inherited in a specific manner

• In humans, sex determination involves the X and Y chromosomes

Sex Linkage• The genes on the X or Y

chromosomes are called sex-linked genes

• Genes on X are called “X-linked,” while those on Y are called “Y-linked”

• The X chromosome is much larger and carries far more genetic information

X-Linked Genes

• Since males only have one X chromosome, they are more likely to suffer from X-linked diseases– Hemophilia– red-green color

blindness– muscular dystrophy

• Since females get one X chromosome from each parent, and have two copies, they are less likely to suffer from X-linked diseases

• X inactivation allows some female organisms to shut off their X chromosomes

7.3 Pedigrees

• A pedigree is a chart showing inheritance patterns in a family

• Pedigrees can be used to identify different types of inheritance patterns