Title: Patterns of Inheritance
1Chapter 8
2Inheritance
Offspring bear witness to the genetic make-up
of the parents and their parents
3Gregor Mendel and the Garden Pea
Mendel experimented with the garden pea in an
effort to understand inheritance. He did
intentional crosses to determine patterns of
inheritance.
4Garden Pea Traits
Mendel worked with several traits in his
experiments related to colors, shapes,
positions, and plant height
5Monohybrid Cross
The Principle of Segregation indicates that pairs
of alleles separate during gamete formation, and
refuse at fertilization to form pairs.
6Dihybrid Cross
The Principle of Independent Assortment indicates
that each pair of alleles separates independently
from the other pairs of alleles
7Chance
Segregation of alleles and fertilization patterns
all occur as chance events One can never be
certain of the outcome, especially in small
numbers
8Pedigrees
It is possible to trace lineages and keep track
of when traits appear in a family lineage
9Recessive Disorder Inheritance
Recessive disorders can appear if both parents
are carriers of the recessive gene
10Autosomes are chromosomes that are not
responsible for sex determination
11Incomplete Dominance
One modification of the Principles that Mendel
determined is Incomplete Dominance In this case
both the dominant and recessive alleles are
displayed in the phenotype
12Multiple Alleles More than Two Alleles
13Pleiotropy
When one gene codes for multiple characteristics,
the condition is called Pleiotropy An example is
sickle-cell anemia
14Polygenic Inheritance
When multiple genes code for one trait, the
condition is known as Polygenic Inheritance An
example is skin color
15Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
16Linked Genes Chromosomal Connection
Not all genes sort independently. Genes on the
same chromosome travel together into the gametes
and then into the offspring
17Linked Genes
18Linked Genes
19Sex-Linked Genes
Linked genes that appear on the sex chromosomes
are called sex-linked In humans, these are the X
and Y chromosomes XX is female, XY is
male Color blindness is an example
20Summary
- Principle of Segregation
- Principle of Independent Assortment
- Probability
- Pedigrees
- Incomplete Dominance
- Multiple Alleles
- Pleiotropy
- Polygenic Inheritance
- Gene Linkage
- Sex-linkage