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Genetics. Flower dissection . Quiz. B. A. C. D. 1. What is the name of the male reproductive part of a flower? (Name ALL if there are more than one) 2. What is the name of the female reproductive part of a flower? (name ALL if there are more than one) 3. WHERE on the flower is the pollen?
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Quiz B A C D 1. What is the name of the male reproductive part of a flower? (Name ALL if there are more than one) 2. What is the name of the female reproductive part of a flower? (name ALL if there are more than one) 3. WHERE on the flower is the pollen? 4. How is a new flower produced? (meaning how does pollination happen?) 5. Identify structure A, B, C and D and write their FUNCTION.
Mendel Brainpop Video
F1 and F2 Generation • Practice: #1: What would the F1 generation look like if a plant with round seeds was cross pollinated with a plant with wrinkled seeds? #2: What would the F2 generation look like if the results form above were self pollinated? #3: What would the F1 generation look like if a plant with tall stems was cross pollinated with a plant with short stems? #4: What would the F2 generation look like if the results form above were self pollinated?
Mendel’s Two Laws: Independent assortment - factors controlling different characteristics are inherited independently of each other. Allele for Purple flowers Allele for White flowers law of segregation -there are two factors controlling a given characteristic, one of which dominates the other, and these factors separate and go to different gametes when a parent reproduces.
Mini Lesson Homo = same Hetero = different Which of the examples above are homozygous? Which are heterozygous?
Probability Sperms Eggs
Punnett Squares Practice: #1. Homozygote dominant crossed with a heterozygote #2. Homozygous recessive crossed with a homozygous dominant #3. Heterozygote crossed with a heterozygote
Polygenic inheritance • Skin color • Eye color • Height
Autosomal traits • Autosomal traits are controlled by genes on one of the 22 human autosomes • Examples: • The allele for free-hanging earlobes (F) is dominant to the allele for attached earlobes (f). • widow’s peak is dominant over no widows peak • Rolling your tongue is dominant over not being able to.
Sex Linked Traits • Traits controlled by genes on the sex chromosomes • X-linked traits in the case of the X chromosome. • X-linked traits have a different pattern of inheritance than autosomal traits because: • males have just one X chromosome. • always inherit their X chromosome from their mother • they pass it on to all their daughters but none of their sons
Autosomal Genetic Disorders AA/Aa aa • caused by mutations in one or a few genes on an autosome (chromosome #s 1-22) • If it is on an autosome, it can either be a “dominant disorder” or a “recessive disorder” • If it is a dominant disorder you will express the disorder if you are heterozygous for the trait or homozygous dominant. • If it is a recessive disorder you will only express the disorder if you are homozygous recessive for the trait.
Sex-Linked Genetic disorders Disorders that are a result of 1 or more genes on a sex chromosomes (usually the x) X LINKED RECESSIVE DISORDERS (most common): If a male carries 1 mutated copy of the gene he will have the disorder. A female needs 2 mutated copies of the disorder to have the disorder. If a female has 1 mutated copy she is called a “carrier”, meaning she does not have the disorder but can pass it on to her offspring.
Chromosomal Genetic Disorders • Caused by an abnormal number of chromosomes • Mistakes may occur during meiosis that result in nondisjunction. • This is the failure of replicated chromosomes to separate during meiosis. • Some of the resulting gametes will be missing a chromosome, while others will have an extra copy of the chromosome
Pedigrees A pedigree is a representation that shows the blood relationships of family members It shows individuals expressing the trait or disorder under study. The chart describes relationship to various members of the family It can also show the origin of a particular trait or disorder.
Genetic counseling Treating genetic diseases • Just treat symptoms (PKU, cystic fibrosis, insulin for symptom prevention) • Gene therapy: replacing the defective gene • Somatic cell gene therapy • Germ cell gene therapy (controversial)
Layer B 1. Mendel Photobook/scrapbook 3. Blood Typing Webquest: http://www.nobelprize.org/educational/medicine/bloodtypinggame/game/index.html 2. Blood Type Mystery 4. PunnettSquare practice packet Extra Credit: • Biotechnology brochure (processes, uses) • As a class: • Baby lab • Article jigsaw • Gattaca
Layer A Genetic Counselor Project