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Mendelian Genetics CH 6 Section 6.3 – 6.5 Slide 2 of 26 ??  Sometimes, certain traits seem to disappear for a generation but then return in the next generation.  How does this happen?  Is this a “law” or “theory”?  Law since we are describing something, not trying to explain it. Slide 3 of 26 Vocabulary  Character – heritable feature  Hair Color  Height of plant  Eye color  Pea color  Pea shape  Trait – variant of a character (heritable feature)  Brown hair color  Tall plant height  Blue eye color  Yellow pea color Slide 4 of 26 More Vocab  Dominant trait  One that will mask the recessive trait if found together  Recessive trait  Trait that will be masked if found with the dominant trait Slide 5 of 26 Breeding  True Breed (purebred)– Whatever traits the parent has are expressed in ALL subsequent populations  For example, self-pollinating a purple flowered plant produces a generation of only purple flowered plants.  Typically, need to do this for at least two (2) generations to ensure that the parent is a true-breed (purebred)  Hybrid – Mating (crossing) of two (2) true-breeding varieties of true-breeds Slide 6 of 26 Vocabulary (Page 2)  P Generation – Parent generation  Two (2) true-breeding parents being crossed  F1 – First filial (child or son) generation  Hybrids  F2 – Second filial generation  Each member of F1 self-pollinates  Hybrids again  3:1 Dominant to Recessive ratio Slide 7 of 26 What Mendel found (stretched the truth about)  Only looked at “all-or-nothing” traits  Sometimes called binary traits – “yes” vs. “no”  Mendel took purebreds for 1 trait, and pollinated it with a purebred for another trait  What is the difference between trait & character?  Purple flowered + White flowered  F1 = All colored purple (all expressed only one trait)  F2 = 3:1 ratio of Dominant to Recessive trait Slide 8 of 26 ___ Generation What type of plants? ____________ ___ Generation What type of plants? ____________ ___ Generation What type of plants? ____________ Slide 9 of 26 Genes  Gene  Portion of DNA that provides the instructions for making a particular protein  Each gene has a particular location on a chromosome called its locus  Like a house’s address  Allele  One of the different forms of the gene  Mendel looked at genes that had ONLY 2 alleles Slide 10 of 26 Mendel’s Model 1. Alternate versions of genes account for variations in inherited characteristics  The alternative versions are called alleles  One plant had the allele for purple flower color while the other had the allele for white flower color 2. For each character, an organism inherits two (2) alleles, one from each parent  The two alleles may be the same or different  If the 2 alleles are the same = Homozygous  Different = Heterozygous Slide 11 of 26 Allele Dominance  Just as there are dominant and recessive traits, there are dominant and recessive alleles  Dominant allele  If present, always expressed  Represented by a capitalized letter: A  Recessive allele  Only expressed when BOTH alleles are recessive  is represented by a lowercase letter: a Slide 12 of 26 Mendel’s Model (Page 2) 3. If the alleles differ (heterozygous), then the dominant allele determines the organism’s appearance  Heterozygous individuals display dominant trait  Homozygous Dominant display _________ trait  Homozygous Recessive display _________ trait Slide 13 of 26 Mondel’s Model (Page 3) 4. Law of Segregation  2 alleles for a heritable character segregate (separate) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes  We already know that homologous chromosomes assort independently during meiosis into gametes  But Mendel did not know about chromosomes Slide 14 of 26 Questions  What is the difference between a gene and a character?  What is the difference between a gene and an allele?  What is the difference between a character and a trait? Slide 15 of 26 Important Vocab.  Phenotype - appearance  Characters  Traits are different types of the character  IF character is eye color, trait is brown, blue, etc  Genotype - genetic makeup  Genes  Alleles are different types of genes  Gene for eye color, alleles = brown (dominant), blue (recessive), etc. Slide 16 of 26 Slide 17 of 26 Punnett Squares  One parent at top, other on the left  Here we are crossing homozygous dominant (HD) in the form of [AA] with Heterozygote (Ht) as [Aa] A A A AA AA a Aa Aa Slide 18 of 26 Slide 19 of 26 Cross all 6 combinations Cross Genotypic Ratio Phenotypic Ratio HomoD x HomoD HomoR x HomoR Heter x Heter HomoD x HomoR HomoD x Heter HomoR x Heter Slide 20 of 26 Monohybrid vs. Dihybrid  Monohybrid Cross – Take pure breeds for 1 character and cross (AA x aa)  You should already understand these.  Dihybrid Cross – Take pure breeds for 2 characters and cross (AABB x aabb)  2 Characters like seed color + seed shape Slide 21 of 26 Law of Independent Assortment  States that each pair of alleles segregates independently of other pairs of alleles during gamete formation  This rule really only pertains to genes (allele pairs) on different chromosomes  If on the same chromosome = linked genes Slide 22 of 26 Slide 23 of 26 Repeat but use Probability  Compute P(green & wrinkled) from the table  Now do so from Punnett Squares for each character  Compute P(Yellow & Round) from table  Now do so from Punnett Squares for each character Slide 24 of 26 Problems  In a dihybrid cross, what is the possibility of heterozygous in one trait and homozygous recessive in the other, given both heterozygous parents?  In a trihybrid cross, what is the probability of getting exactly 2 recessive phenotypes, if one parent is heterozygous for all 3 genes and the other is homozygous recessive for 2 genes, and hetero for the 3rd? Slide 25 of 26 Mendel’s Big Ideas  The Law of Segregation  The 2 alleles of a gene separate (segregate) during gamete formation, so that a sperm or egg only carries 1 allele of each pair  Explains 3:1 ratio found in hybrid crosses  The Law of Independent Assortment  Each pair of alleles separates independently (of other allele pairs) into gametes  Genes assort independently of one another Slide 26 of 26
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            