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Mendel’s Theory. Section 8-2. Mendel’s Work Became a Theory of Heredity. Mendel’s experiments changed people’s belief that an offspring got his/her characteristics from blending of the two parents’ characteristics.
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Mendel’s Theory Section 8-2
Mendel’s Work Became a Theory of Heredity • Mendel’s experiments changed people’s belief that an offspring got his/her characteristics from blending of the two parents’ characteristics. • Mendel stated that each parent has two separate “heritable factors” for each trait – one from each parent. • When gametes form, only one of the two factors for each trait is given to a gamete. • When gametes fuse during fertilization, the resulting offspring has two factors for each trait.
Mendel’s Hypotheses • Mendel developed four hypotheses that were based directly on the results of his experiments. • These four hypotheses now make up the Mendelian theory of heredity.
Hypothesis One • For each inherited trait , an individual has two copies of the gene – one from each parent.
Hypothesis Two • There are alternative versions of genes. Today these are called alleles. • In the case with flower color, the alleles would be purple or yellow. • One allele comes from each parent.
Hypothesis Three • When two different alleles occur together, one of them may be completely expressed, while the other may have no observable effect on the organism’s appearance. • Dominant – the expressed form of the trait • Recessive – the form of the trait that was not expressed when the dominant form is present.
Hypothesis Four • When gametes are formed, the alleles for each gene in an individual separate independently of one another. Thus, gametes carry only one allele for each inherited trait. • When gametes unite during fertilization, each gamete contributes one allele. • Parents can only contribute one allele because of the way gametes are formed in meiosis.
Mendel’s Findings in Modern Terms • Dominant alleles are represented by the first letter of the trait as a capital letter. • Recessive alleles are represented by the same letter as the dominant trait, but in lower case. • Homozygous – when two alleles are the same for a particular gene • Heterozygous – when the two alleles for a particular gene are different
In heterozygous individuals, only the dominant allele is expressed. • The recessive allele is present, but not expressed. • The set of alleles an individual has is called its genotype. • The physical appearance of a trait is called a phenotype. • Phenotypes (physical appearance) are determined by the genotype (set of alleles). • Dominant form of trait is written first, then the recessive form.
If purple is the dominant trait (P) and white is the recessive trait (p) what would the following be? • Homozygous Recessive pp and white • Homozygous Dominant PP and purple • Heterozygous Pp and purple
Mendel’s Ideas Gave Rise to the Laws of Heredity • Mendel’s ideas or hypotheses are often referred to as the Laws of Heredity • The Law of Segregation • Describes the behavior of chromosomes during meiosis, when homologous chromosomes and then chromatids are separated • States that the two alleles for a trait segregate (separate) when gametes are formed
The Law of Independent Assortment • Mendel studied whether the inheritance of one trait influenced the inheritance of a different trait. • He conducted dihybrid crosses to determine this. • Dihybrid cross – a cross that considers two pairs of contrasting traits • Found that the inheritance of one trait does not influence the inheritance of another trait • States that the alleles of different genes separate independently of one another during gamete formation • We now know this only applies to genes located on different chromosomes or that are far apart on the same chromosome.
Summary • Different versions of a gene are called alleles. An individual usually has two alleles for a gene, each inherited from a different parent. • Individuals with the same two alleles for a gene are homozygous; those with two different alleles for a gene are heterozygous. • The law of segregation states that two alleles for a trait separate when gametes are formed. The law of independent assortment states that two or more pairs of alleles separate independently of one another during gamete formation.
Homework • Section 8-2 Review Questions p. 167 #1-5