Title: Mendelian Genetics
1Mendelian Genetics!
2Mendel
- Studied inherited traits in flowers
- For examplecolor
- His experiment
- What conclusions can you make??
3Further experiments
- Original Flowers
- Mated the purple flowers and got unusual results
- What can you conclude?
4Some vocabulary
- P generation (parent)
- F1 generation (first)
- F2 generation (second)
5Mendels ideas
- Traits come in different versions called
- Alleles there are alternative versions of a gene
- ex the gene for flower color has two alleles
- Different alleles vary in the sequence of DNA or
nucleotides (ACTG) at the specific gene
Rememberyou always have two copies, one from
mom and one from dad
6Mendels ideas
- Some traits completely mask othersthey dont
blend - Dominant trait If two alleles at a locus differ,
the dominant allele determines the appearance
(dominates) - Ex Purple
- Recessive trait When two alleles differ, the
recessive allele has no noticeable affect on the
appearance (is hidden) - Ex White
What is the only way to get a white flower??
7Mendels Two Laws of Inheritance
- 1. Segregation
- Two alleles for a gene separate (segregate)
during gamete formation and end up in different
gametes.
Homologous Chromosomes
Somatic Cell
W
P
Meiosis
Gamete
W
P
8Explaining what Mendel saw
- Lets work it out using a punnet square, looking
at all the possible combinations of alleles from
each generation. - Dominant trait is always a capital letter
- Recessive trait is always lower case same letter.
- For flower color then P (purple), p (white)
- If one parent is PP and the other is pp, what
will the offspring look like?
9P Generation
Offspring are just combinations of parents
gametes
P P
Purple parent
Reproductive cells (egg, sperm)
P
P
Pp
p
Pp
p p
Pp
White Parent
Pp
p
F1 Generation
10What does this tell us?
- What do these offspring look like? Why?
- Phenotype the physical appearance of a trait
- Ex all purple
- Genotype the genetic makeup of an individual
- Ex all Pp
Pp
Pp
Pp
Pp
F1 Generation
11F2 generation
What do the offspring look like if both offspring
are Pp? Phenotype ¾ Purple ¼ White Genotype
¼ PP 2/4 or ½ Pp ¼ pp
p
P
P
Pp
PP
p
Pp
pp
12Genotype vs. Phenotype
13Genetic vocabulary
- Homozygous when an organism has two of the same
alleles - Ex PP, or pp
- Heterozygous when an organism has two different
alleles - Ex Pp
14Mini Quiz
- Cystic Fibrosis is a recessive disorder.
- C normal, c cystic fibrosis
- If one parent is heterozygous for cystic fibrosis
and the other has cystic fibrosis, what is the
percent chance that they will have a child with
cystic fibrosis? Show your work. - 2. What if both parents are carriers?
15Mendel also looked at more than on allele at a
time Dihybrids
- Monohybrid One trait at a time ex color
- Dihybrid Observing two traits at a time, ex
color and shape! - Color yellow (dominant) or green
- Shape round (dominant) or wrinkled
16Possible Reproductive cells Every combination
of both genes
17Mendels Two Laws of Inheritance
- 2. Independent Assortment
- When looking at more than one trait
- Each pair of alleles segregates independently of
other pairs of alleles during gamete formation. - (only works if genes are on different
chromosomes) - If the parent is YyRr, the possible reproductive
cells are all combinations - YR Yr yR yr
- Lets do a problem from your homework
18Other ways that alleles interact
- Incomplete Dominance
- When the heterozygous condition results in a
phenotype that is different than the dominant or
recessive phenotype. (sometimes a combination or
mix of the two) - Example Snapdragons
- Red RR
- White WW
- Pink RW makes 50 less color
19- Incomplete Dominance
- Example
100 Pink
50 Pink
25 white
25 Red
20Codominance
- Codominance is when both alleles show up equally
in a phenotype. - Example Blood types.
- Alleles A, B, O
- A and B are codominant
- This is also an example of multiple alleles.
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22Blood compatibility
- Universal Donor Type O
- Has no proteins to be recognized by an immune
system as foreign - Universal Acceptor Type AB
- An individual with type AB bloods immune system
will recognize both A and B proteins as its own.
23Alleles a spectrum of interactions
- B black, b white
- Bb Bb Bb/BW
- Complete Incomplete Codominance
- Dominance Dominance
-
- Black and white
- Black Grey spots
24Other vocabPleiotropy
- One gene can affect a number of characteristics
in an organism - Not always one gene one discrete trait
- Most genes are pleiotropic, cause multiple
affects - Cystic Fibrosis
- Sickle Cell
- Achondroplasia (dwarfism)
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26Epistasis
- One gene can mask another
- Ex Coat color in mice is determined by 2 genes
- Pigment, C, or no pigment, c
- More pigment (black), B, Less pigment (brown), b
- cc albino
27Epistasis
28Polygenic Inheritance
- Most traits are determined by the additive
effects of 2 or more genes - Phenotypes are a continuum
- Human traits
- Skin Color
- Height
- Weight
- Eye color
- Intelligence
- Behavior
29Nature vs. Nurture
- How much is genetic?
- Phenotype can be affected by both genes and the
environment. - Ex hydrangeas, human skin color, others?
30Sex Linked Traits