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Professor E. U. Gene Chapters 10 & 11 Mendel, DNA & Genes Gregor Mendel     Austrian monk, gardener, scientist First acknowledged to study heredity – the passing on of characteristics from parents to offspring Traits – characteristics that are inherited Father of genetics – the branch of biology that studies heredity The Peas     Mendel chose garden peas They reproduce sexually, so they have both male and female sex cells, called gametes Pollen and egg unite in a process called fertilization Fertilization results in a fertilized cell, called a zygote, that develops into a seed The Peas Mate   Pollination is the transfer of pollen grains from a male reproductive organ to a female productive organ Both male and female organs are close together in the same pea flower    As a result, peas normally selfpollinate This is what Mendel wanted in most cases Mendel also removed the male organ and dusted pollen on flower of another plant  Called cross-pollination Mendel’s Peas   Mendel’s peas had been self-pollinating for a long time This meant that the tall ones had been tall for a long time and the short ones had been short for generations  Called purebreds Mendel’s Monohybrid Crosses    Mendel performed crosspollination with a tall pea plant (6 foot purebred) and a short pea plant (2 foot purebred) – these are the parental generation (P1) Hybrid – offspring of parents that have different forms of a trait All of the offspring grew as tall as the tall parent – first filial generation (F1)  The “short trait” seemed to disappear Monohybrid Crosses  Mendel let his F1 plants self pollinate   Second filial generation (F2) He counted over 1000 plants    About 75% were tall About 25% were short Ratio of 3:1 Monohybrid Crosses  Mendel did these same types of crosses for 7 traits        Seed shape: round vs. wrinkled Seed color: yellow vs. green Flower color: purple vs. white Flower position: axial vs. terminal Pod color: green vs. yellow Pod shape: inflated vs. constricted Plant height: tall vs. short  back The Rule of Unit Factors     Mendel concluded that each organism has two factors that control each of its traits We now know these factors are genes and that they are located on chromosomes Alternate forms of genes are called alleles Each of Mendel’s traits had two forms of genes – two alleles  One comes from mother, one from father The Rule of Dominance  Some alleles are dominant over recessive alleles   In genetics, capital letters are used to express dominant alleles and lower case letters are used to express recessive alleles   Ex: “T” for tall allele, “t” for short allele So what will a “TT” plant look like?    Dominant alleles cover recessive alleles A Tt plant? A tt plant? Earlobes, Forelock, Dimples, Straight thumb, Bent Pinky, Middigit hair The Law of Segregation    Mendel’s first law of heredity Every individual has two alleles of each gene and when gametes are produced, each gamete receives one of these alleles So how did this work in Mendel’s F2 generation ? Phenotypes   Two organisms can look alike on the outside, but have different allele combinations Phenotype is the way an organism looks and behaves  ex: yellow seeds can be TT or Tt Genotypes  The allele combination an organism contains is known as its genotype    An organism is homozygous for a trait if the two alleles for the trait are the same   You can’t always see this because of dominiance TT and Tt are different genotypes Ex: TT or tt An organism is heterozygous for a trait if the two alleles for the trait are different  Ex: Tt Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses    Mendel crossed peas that differed from each other in two traits He crossed plants that were homozygous for round yellow seeds (RRYY) with plants that were homozogous for green wrinkled seeds (rryy) F1 generation   All plants produced round, yellow seeds What was dominant? The Second Generation (F2)   Let F1 plants selfpollinate (were heterozygous for two traits) He got all four combinations in a certain ratio     Round, yellow – 9 Round, green – 3 Wrinkled, yellow – 3 Wrinkled, green - 1 The Law of Independent Assortment   Mendel’s second law of heredity Genes for different traits are inherited independently of each other   Inheritance of one trait has no influence on another trait Instead of a ratio of 9:3:3:1, what would the dihybrid cross have looked like? Punnett Squares   1905, Reginald Punnet, English biologist created a shorthand way of finding EXPECTED proportions of possible genotypes in the offspring of a cross Monohybrid crosses   See overhead Dihybrid crosses  See overhead Probability      Reality is rarely like a Punnett square When you toss a coin, what’s the likelihood it will be heads? You toss 20 heads in a row, what’s the likelihood the next will be heads? TOSS COINS ASSIGNMENT   P. 262, Problem-Solving Lab P. 276, Connection to Math Section 1 Review         What structural features of pea plants made them suitable for Mendel’s genetic studies? What are genotypes of a homozygous and a heterozygous tall pea plant? One parent is homozygous tall and the other is heterozygous. How many offspring will be heterozygous? How many different gametes can an RRYy parent form? What are they? What is the law of segregation? What is the law of independent assortment? What is the rule of dominance? In garden peas, the allele for yellow peas is dominant to the allele for green peas. Suppose you have a plant that produces yellow peas, but you don’t know whether it is homozygous dominant or heterozygous. What experiment could you do to find out? Genetic Variation    Crossing over during meiosis provides variability How many different kinds of gametes can a pea plant produce? Each cell has 7 pairs of chromosomes    Each can line up at the equator in two different ways and separate by segregation 2n = 27 = 128 possible combinations without crossing over When you include the egg, 128 x 128 = 16,384 different combinations of offspring Genetic Variation     In humans, how many possible combinations are there in a single sperm or egg? 223 = 8,388,608 combinations How many possible combinations with fertilization 8,388,608 x 8,388,608 = 7.04 x 1013 (over 70 trillion) Genetic Recombination    With crossing over, additional variation is added providing an almost endless amount of variation possible This reassortment of chromosomes and the genetic information they carry, either by crossing over or by independent segregation of homologous chromosomes is called genetic recombination Variation is the raw material that forms the basis for evolution to act on Nondisjunction    Go back to anaphase I The failure of homologous chromosomes to separate properly during meiosis is called nondisjunction In one type of nondisjunction, two kinds of gametes result  One with an extra chromosome (trisomy)   Trisomy 21 – Down syndrome One missing a chromosome (monosomy, usually don’t survive)  One exception – Turner syndrome, female is XO Nondisjunction  The other type of nondisjunction involves a total lack of separation of homologous chromosomes    Not uncommon in plants – often larger and healthier     Gamete inherits a complete diploid set Zygote has polyploidy chrysanthemum (tetraploid, 4n) Wheat (hexaploid, 6n) Apples (3n) There are even chemicals that help plant breeders do this artificially Gene Linkage  Genes that are close together on a chromosome are often inherited together    Crossing over rarely works for just one gene These genes are said to be linked So chromosomes, not genes follow Mendel’s independent assortment Chromosome Mapping   Crossing over occurs Geneticists use the frequency of crossing over to map the relative position of genes on a chromosome  Genes that are further apart are more likely to have crossing over occur Chromosome Mapping   Suppose there are 4 genes on a chromosome – A, B, C, D Frequencies of recombination as follows:       Between Between Between Between A A B C & B: 50% (50 map units) & D: 10% (10 map units) & C: 5% (5 map units) & D: 35% (35 map units) These give a relative distance between genes A -10 units- D -35units- C -5 units- B (whole thing is 50 units) Section 2 Review        How are the cells at the end of meiosis different from the cells at the beginning of meiosis? What is the significance of meiosis to sexual reproduction? Why are there so many varied phenotypes within a species such as humans? How does meiosis support Mendel’s law of independent assortment? What is crossing over? How can you use crossing over to map a chromosome? What are linked genes? What is DNA?     DNA contains the complete instructions for manufacturing all the proteins for an organism DNA achieves its control by determining the structure of proteins The moral - DNA codes for PROTEINS Let’s start with an animated tour Alfred Hershey & Martha Chase   For a long time, many scientists believed protein was the genetic material  Protein is more complex than DNA 1952, Hershey & Chase experimented with radioactively labeled viruses (bacteriophages) made only of protein & DNA  DNA was labeled with one isotope  Protein with a different isotope Hershey & Chase   Bactriophages inject genetic material into bacteria, causing the bacteria to create more bacteriophages Hershey & Chase “followed” the radioactively labeled viruses  Discovered that DNA was the genetic material being injected into the bacteria Structure of Nucleotides   DNA is a polymer of nucleotides Nucleotides have 3 parts     A simple sugar (deoxyribose in DNA) A phosphate group A nitrogenous base 4 possible nitrogenous bases in DNA     Adenine (A) Thymine (T) Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Watson & Crick     In 1953, published a paper proposing that DNA is made of two chains of nucleotides held together by nitrogenous bases  Hydrogen bonds hold strands together (weak)  A only bonds with T, C only bonds with G DNA is a double helix Also correctly described now DNA replicates Won the Nobel Prize DNA- Common Thread   DNA is the same among ALL organisms with DNA The differences come with the different sequences of the four bases   Like different words meaning different things, even though the letters are the same The more alike the sequences, the more related he organisms are Replication of DNA   Without replication, new cells (after mitosis) would only have half the DNA of their parents All organisms undergo DNA replicaton How DNA Replicates    Due to complementary base pairing, “knowing” the sequence of one strand helps you predict what the other will look like Replication begins when an enzyme breaks the hydrogen bonds between bases  Called “unzipping” the DNA Cells have stockpiles of nucleotides and these bond with the newly exposed bases  Done by a set of enzymes called DNA polymerases How DNA Replicates    Each DNA strand has 2 ends, labeled the 5’ and and the 3’ end.  Replication proceeds in the 5’ 3’ direction Each new strand formed is a complement of one of the parents strands  Half old, Half new called semiconservative replication Genetic continuity is maintained Section 1 Review       Describe the structure of a nucleotide. How do the nucleotides in DNA bond with each other within a strand? How do they bond with each other across strands? Explain why the structure of a DNA molecule is often described as a zipper. How does DNA hold information? The sequence of nitrogenous bases on one strand of a DNA molecule is GGCAGTTCATGC. What would be the sequence of bases on the complementary strand? In general, describe the steps that occur during DNA replication. Genes & Proteins      The information in DNA is put to work through the production of proteins Some proteins become important structures Other proteins (enzymes) control chemical reactions Remember that proteins are polymers of amino acids The sequence of nucleotides determines the string of amino acids and the protein RNA  RNA differs from DNA in 3 ways:     RNA is single stranded (DNA is double) The sugar in RNA is ribose (DNA is deoxyribose) Instead of thymine, RNA contains the base uracil 3 types of RNA    Messenger RNA (mRNA) rRNA tRNA Transcription     In the nucleus (if cell is eukaryotic), enzymes make an RNA copy of a portion of a DNA strand  This process is called transcription Begins as enzymes unzip the molecule of DNA in region of gene being transcribed RNA polymerases pair free nucleotides with their complementary strands The mRNA strand breaks away RNA Processing    Genes usually contain long non-coding sequences of bases, called introns Regions that contain coding sequences are called exons Enzymes in the nucleus cut out the intron segments from the mRNA strand and then paste it back together Genetic Code  A code is needed to convert the language of mRNA (4 letters) into the language of proteins (20 amino acids)   How big do the words have to be?????? A codon is a group of 3 nitrogenous bases in mRNA that codes for an amino acid   1st one found was UUU - coding for phenalynine 64 possible codons, so some amino acids correspond to multiple codons Genetic Code  Some codons don’t code for an amino acid - they code for “instructions”    UAG - codon for “stop” AUG is the “start” codon as well as coding for methionine The code is universal  Used in ALL organisms the same Translation   Translation is the process of converting the information in a sequence of nitrogenous bases in mRNA into a sequence of amino acids in a protein Takes place at the ribosomes in the cytoplasm Transfer RNA   Transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules bring the amino acids (which are in the cytoplasm) to the ribosome  Each tRNA molecule attaches to only one type of amino acid There is a sequence of 3 nucleotides on the opposite side of the tRNA molecule from the amino-acid attachment site  It is complementary to a specific codon, thus it is called an anti-codon At the Ribosome • tRNA attaches to mRNA at the ribosome • mRNA strand “slides along” and another tRNA attaches at second bonding site • two amino acids bond together with a peptide bond • mRNA “slides along” again, allowing another tRNA to come on in • stops at certain codon and is released Section 2 Review       How does the DNA nucleotide sequence determine the amino acid sequence in a protein? What is a codon, and what does it represent? What is the role of tRNA in protein synthesis? Compare DNA replication and transcription. You have learned that there are stop codons that signal the end of an amino acid chain. Why is it important that a signal to stop translation be part of protein synthesis? In general, sequence the steps involved in protein synthesis from the production of mRNA to the final translation of the DNA code. Mutations     Any change in the DNA sequence is called a mutation Can be caused by errors in replication, transcription, cell division, or by external agents Most mutations are detrimental - create disfunctional proteins, etc. Occasionally, they may have positive effects Mutations  Mutations in reproductive cells are passed on to offspring     Happen to a sperm or egg All of offspring’s cells have this trait Most embryos do not survive Mutations in body cells effect only that individual  Usually only one cell or a few cells at first  Passed on if continue to divide Point Mutations   A change in a single base pair in DNA Will change one amino acid   Affects depend on which amino acid is changed Example   THE DOG BIT THE CAT THE DOG BIT THE CAR Frameshift Mutation    A mutation in which a single base is added or deleted from the DNA Every codon after the mutation would be different Example   THE DOG BIT THE CAT THE DOB ITT HEC AT Chromosomal Alterations  Structural changes in chromosomes     Especially common in plants Often happens in meiosis   Parts of chromosomes break off Parts of chromosomes switch places Most zygotes fail to grow Non-disjunction is an example Chromosomal Mutations      4 kinds Deletion: part of a chromosome is left out Insertion: part of a chromatid breaks off and attaches to sister chromatid (duplication of segment) Inversion: part of a chromosome breaks off and reattaches backwards Translocation: part of a chromosme breaks off and attaches to nonhomologous chromosome Causes of Mutations   Spontaneous mutations occur as a mistake during DNA replication (probably - we don’t know for certain) Mutagens are environmental agents that can cause a change in DNA   X-rays, UV light, nuclear radiation Dioxins, asbestos, benzene, formaldehyde Repairing DNA   Cells have repair mechanisms for fixing DNA These enzymes “proofread” new DNA strands during replication and replace incorrect nucleotides with correct ones  Work well, but not perfect  The more exposure to a mutagen, the more likely the mutation will not be fixed Section 3 Review       What is a mutation? Describe how point mutations and frameshift mutations affect the synthesis of proteins. Explain why a mutation in a sperm or egg cell has different consequences than one in a heart cell. How are mutations and cancer related? Name and describe the four kinds of chromosomal mutations. The chemicals in cigarette smoke are known to cause cancer. Propose a series of steps that could lead to development of lung cancer in a smoker.
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            