Title: History of Genetics
1History of Genetics
Biology
2Genetics
- How characteristics are transmitted from parents
to offspring
3Gregor Mendel
4Gregor Mendel (1822-1884)
- worked with Pisum satium (pea plant)
-
5Mendel studied 7 characteristics
- Flower color
- Flower position along stem
- Seed color
- Seed shape
- Pod shape
- Pod color
- Stem length
6Mendels Experiments
- Mendels First Cross
- Crossed purebred purple
- with purebred white
- P (parent) generation
- - F1 purple
- Crossed F1 hybrids
- produced F2 generation
- - 3 purple 1 white
7Mendels Ideas of Inheritance
- Alternative versions of genes (alleles) account
for variations in inherited characters. - each gene resides at a particular
location of a chromosome and can exist in
variable forms (two different forms for flower
color)
P
Pp
p
8Mendels Ideas of Inheritance
- For each characteristic, an organism inherits
two alleles, - one from each parent.
- an organism is either homozygous (two of
the same alleles) or heterozygous (two different
alleles)
Homozygous
Heterozygous
9Mendels Ideas of Inheritance
- If the two alleles differ, the dominant allele
is fully expressed and the recessive allele has
no noticeable affect on appearance. - heterozygotes express the dominant trait
RR
rr
Rr
10Mendels Law of Segregation
- The two alleles for each character segregate
during - gamete production.
- ovum/sperm get only one of the two
alleles (haploid)
11(No Transcript)
12P generation Phenotype Purple/White
Genotype PP/pp F1 generation
Phenotype Purple Genotype Pp F2
generation? Genotype/Phenotype can be
predicted using a Punnet Square
13Mendels Law of Independent Assortment
Each pair of alleles segregates into gametes
independently.
WH
wH
wh
Wh
14(No Transcript)
15Mendels Law of Independent Assortment
Parental Genotypes GGWW ggww
gw
GW
Parental Gametes?
GgWw
F1 Genotypes?
gw
GW
Gw
gW
F1 Gametes?
16Beyond Mendel...
Different Types of Inheritance
17Complete Dominance Incomplete Dominance
Mendels Traits Snapdragon Color
18Incomplete Dominance
One allele does not dominant the other in the
heterozygous condition. Both alleles are
expressed but a new phenotype appears that is
intermediate.
RR
rr
Rr
19Codominance
Both alleles in the Heterozygous condition
are dominant.
CC
Cc
cc
20Codominance Multiple Alleles
21Incomplete Dominance
22(No Transcript)