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Intro to Genetics and Mendel Honors Biology Ms. Kim. Transmission (passing down) of Traits. How? One possible explanation of heredity is a “blending” hypothesis genetic material contributed by two parents mixes. Another Hypothesis.
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Intro to Genetics and Mendel Honors Biology Ms. Kim
Transmission (passing down) of Traits How? • One possible explanation of heredity is a “blending” hypothesis • genetic material contributed by two parents mixes
Another Hypothesis • An alternative to the blending model is the hypothesis of inheritance (genes) • Parents pass on discrete heritable units (factors) called genes • http://wps.aw.com/bc_campbell_biology_7/29/7523/1925929.cw/nav_and_content/index.html • The Novelty Gene Video
Figure 14.1 Gregor Johann Mendel (1843) • Austrian Monk- “Father of Modern Genetics” • Documented a mechanism of inheritance through his experiments with garden peas • The scientific study of heredity is called GENETICS! • Worked with pea plants in his monastery • Correctly believed that heritable factors (genes) retain their individuality from generation to generation • i.e. – marbles (no blending of colors!)
Gregor Johann Mendel • Mendel used the scientific method to identify two laws of inheritance • Mendel discovered the basic principles of heredity • By breeding garden peas in carefully planned (CONTROLLED) experiments
Mendel’s Experimental Method • Why did Mendel choose pea plants? • available in many varieties of traits • They have seven distinct & observable traits • easy to get • he could strictly control which plants mated with which • Grow quickly • They reproduce quickly & have a short life cycle • They produce many offspring in one cross
Mendel’s Experimental Cross Purebred white and purple flowers • All Purple • All White • Both White/Purple Offspring were allowed to self pollinate White flowers reappear in some offspring What did Mendel notice? Did the trait for white flowers disappear in F1 generation?
Some genetic vocabulary • Character: a heritable feature, such as flower color • Trait: a variant of a character, such as purple or white flowers
Mendel observed the same pattern • In many other pea plant characters
Pea Plant Fertilization • Self fertilization : mate with self produce identical offspring • TRUE or PURE breeds • Cross fertilization : mate with another can produce different offspring • HYBRIDS • http://wps.aw.com/bc_campbell_biology_7/29/7523/1925929.cw/nav_and_content/index.html • Colored Cotton Video
Mendel’s Experiment • Mendel only looked at “either-or” characters • Ex: Purple OR white flowers • Mendel started his experiments with “true-breeding” • Made through self fertilization so plants are “TRUE” for only 1 trait • Known as HOMOZYGOUS for trait
What was Mendel’s Procedure? 1. He made 14 “TRUE BREEDS” • 1 for EACH trait he looked at • These are the original parents • Are called the P generation
What was Mendel’s Procedure? 2. He used cross fertilization to mate 2 true breeds for same gene • Ex: Purple vs white flower color 3. He collected the offspring (progeny) • The hybrid (mixed) offspring of theP generation • Are called the F1 generation
What was Mendel’s Procedure? 4. He crossed (using cross fertilization) male and female from F1 progeny • When F1 individuals are mated together • The F2 generationis produced
P Generation (true-breeding parents) Purple flowers White flowers F1 Generation (hybrids) All plants had purple flowers F2 Generation What did Mendel Discover? P F1 F2 • A 3:1 ratio, purple to white flowers, in the F2 generation Where did the white color go?
Genetics Vocab P generation parental generation have offspring called the F1 generation (hybrids) Hybrid (F1) the offspring of two true breeding varieties If F1 generations self-fertilize/cross, their offspring are called the F2 generation Mendel worked with his pea plants until he was sure that all were true-breeding varieties (pure bred)
Allele for purple flowers Homologous pair of chromosomes Locus for flower-color gene Allele for white flowers Figure 14.4 What are Mendel’s factors? • Mendel’s “factors” are now called alleles • Alternative version or form of a gene F f
Mendel’s Experiments • After studying pea plants, Mendel concluded that: • Traits are passed from one generation to the next through genes. • Each trait is controlled by a different form of a gene called an allele • Some alleles are dominantto others called recessive traits • New question: Have the recessive alleles disappeared or are they still present in the parents?
What did Mendel Conclude? • Mendel reasoned that • In the F1 plants, only 1 factor (ex: purple flower) was affecting physical outcome color in hybrids • This factor was dominant and the hidden factor was recessive
Recessive is… • Represented by a lowercase letter (it is NOT the letter itself, though) • an allele that does NOT produce a characteristic effect when present with a dominant allele • only expressed when present with another (identical) recessive allele • This is known as the homozygous condition • aa or hh
Dominant is… • Represented by a uppercase letter • an allele that produces the same trait whether inherited with a another dominant allele (homozygous) or with a recessive allele (heterozygous) • Aa or AA • The allele that is expressedif present
Frequency of Dominant Alleles • Dominant alleles • Not necessarily better, stronger, etc.than recessive alleles • Ex: Polydactyl
Mendel’s Experiments • Mendel crossed the first generation and saw that the recessive trait showed up in about 1 of 4 plants. • Conclusion: Law of Segregation! • What is the Law of Segregation?! • Organisms inherit two copies of each gene (one from each parent) • Organisms donate only one copy of each gene in their gametes (sex cells) • Therefore, the two copies of each gene segregate (separate) during gamete formation (meiosis)
The Law of Segregation: Mendel’s 1st Law • Each gamete ONLY gets 1 allele
More about Alleles… • Each individual has 2 alleles for the same gene • located on homologous chromosomes • Each parent passes 1 allele for each gene to his/her offspring • In sperm or egg • What stage of meiosis are alleles segregated into gametes? • Meiosis Anaphase I
a A
Mendel’s Observations • Used pea plants to see patterns in the way various traits were inherited • Using his data, he saw that different traits are inherited separately • Example: Green pea color isn’t always inherited with wrinkled pea shape • Green peas can be smooth and round too! • This is called the Law of Independent Assortment!
What is the Law of Independent Assortment? • Allele pairs (traits) separate independently of each other during gamete formation (meiosis) • Different traits are inherited separately • Example – peas can be green and wrinkled OR green and round • This explains genetic diversity among organisms
Law of Independent Assortment:Mendel’s 2nd Law • Says genes are inherited independently of other genes • Genes are not linked unless on the same chromosome! • Mendel assumed traits occur on different chromosomes! • Occurs during Metaphase I
Useful Genetic Vocabulary • Homozygous • A pair of IDENTICAL (same) alleles for that gene • Exhibits true-breeding • aa = homozygous recessive(or just recessive) • HH = homozygous dominant • Heterozygous • Pair of alleles that are different for that gene • Aa or Hh
More Genetic Vocabulary • An organism’s genotype • Is its genetic (DNA) makeup • A.k.a.-the allele combination (includes 2 alleles) • An organism’s phenotype • Is its physical outcome of the genotype • Ex: blue eyes or AB blood type
Mendelian Genetics…aka-COMPLETE DOMINANCE If an organism is heterozygous (Hh), • The effect of the recessive allele is HIDDEN • Heterozygous and homozygous dominant have SAME phenotype • The 1st allele is “completely dominant” over the 2nd allele
Phenotype Genotype Purple PP (homozygous) Pp (heterozygous) 3 pp (homozygous) White Ratio 3:1 Ratio 1:2:1 Figure 14.6 1 Purple 2 Pp (heterozygous) Purple 1 1
Why Did Mendel Keep Getting the SAME results? • We can answer this question using a Punnett square • a diagram (box) used to predict probabilities of possible outcomes for offspring that will result from a cross between 2 parents • SHOWS EXPECTED RESULTS (not necessarily actual)
Practice PURPLE X WHITE PURPLE PURPLE & WHITE • Which flower color is recessive? • White • Purple • Neither • Both
Practice PURPLE X WHITE PURPLE PURPLE & WHITE • Which flower color is recessive? • WHITE • What would the genotype be for the recessive flower? A. PP homozygous dominant B. pp homozygous recessive C. Pp Heterozygous
Practice PURPLE X WHITE PURPLE PURPLE & WHITE • Which flower color is recessive? • WHITE • What would the genotype be for the recessive flower? • pp homozygous recessive • Which flower color is dominant? • White • Purple • Neither • Both
Practice PURPLE X WHITE PURPLE PURPLE & WHITE • Which flower color is recessive? • WHITE • What would the genotype be for the recessive flower? • pp homozygous recessive • Which flower color is dominant? • PURPLE • What would the genotype be for the dominant flower color? A. PP homozygous dominant B. Pp heterozygous C. pp homozygous recessive D. Both A & B
Genetics Vocab (pt 2) • Monohybrid cross cross where parents differ in only one trait (Rr x rr) • Dihybrid cross cross where parents differ in two traits (RrHh x rrHH) • Punnett square – a diagram that shows the gene combinations that mightresult from a genetic cross of two parents