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The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance

The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance. Or Why Siblings Don’t Look Alike…Or Do They?. Background. 1900—3 botanists ‘discovered’ Mendel’s work. Each had replicated his experiments and then found his scientific writings. 1875—Mitosis found and documented. 1890’s—Meiosis found and documented.

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The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance

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  1. The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance Or Why Siblings Don’t Look Alike…Or Do They?

  2. Background • 1900—3 botanists ‘discovered’ Mendel’s work. • Each had replicated his experiments and then found his scientific writings. • 1875—Mitosis found and documented. • 1890’s—Meiosis found and documented. • (Both by cytologists—cell biologists) • 1900 Cytology and Genetics crashed into each other

  3. Etc… • Biologists began to recognize chromosomes and mendelian ‘factors’ were related. • 1902 Chromosome theory of inheritance was developed. • Early 20th century Thomas Hunt Morgan was the first to associate a specific gene to a specific chromosome.

  4. THM • THM used Drosophila melanogaster ‘fruit fly’ to study genetics. • Fruit fly has 4 pairs of chromosomes, and can be seen with a light microscope (chromosomes) • Fruit fly reproduces 100’s of offspring in about two weeks.

  5. Definitions • Wild type—Phenotype most common in wild populations. • Mutant phenotype—Traits that are alternative to wild type phenotypes.

  6. Morgan found after extensive breeding a white eyed fruit fly that was male. Wild type is red eyed. Bred with a WT female F1 generation all red eyed. THM’s Work

  7. F2 generation was a 3:1 ratio red eyed to white eyed. White eyed flies were all male. Thus eye color is on the X chromosome. Genes on a sex chromosome are sex-linked genes.

  8. Linked Genes • Each chromosome has 100’s to 1000’s of genes • Linked Genes—genes that are on the same chromosome. • Genes on a chromosome tend to be inherited together because chromosomes are inherited as a unit. • See test cross on pg. 273

  9. How does independent assortment and crossing over affect genetic recombination's? • Genetic recombination—Production of offspring with new combinations of traits from two parents. • Parental types—Offspring which match one or the other parent.

  10. Recombinants—Offspring have new combinations of phenotypes and thus genotypes. • 50% chance of recombination for genes on separate chromosomes. • For a dihybred cross of unlinked heterozygous genes with homozygous genes the expected ratio would be 1:1:1:1. • If the two genes were completely linked the expected ratio would be 1:1:0:0.

  11. Neither of the previous ratio typically does not happen for linked genes. • You can calculate the recombination frequency with this formula. # of recombinants RF = Total offspring X 100 = ___% • You can use recombination frequency to determine/construct a genetic map.

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