Title: Plant Genetics
1Plant Genetics
- Heredity and Reproduction
2Heredity and Reproduction
- A plant or animal is only as developed as its
genetic components. - An animal or plant receives its characteristics
from its parents. - Scientists are continuously searching for
improved crop and animal varieties through
Selective Breeding.
3Heredity and Reproduction
- The first major breakthrough in plant breeding
occurred in the 1930s with the development of
hybrid seed. - Hybrid seed produce 25 to 50 greater yields
than traditional corn varieties. - Why would hybrids produce more seed?
- What is drawback to hybrids and how do
researchers control this?
4Heredity and Reproduction
- Plant breeders use knowledge of genetics and
heredity to design plant breeding programs. - A combination of traditional and molecular
techniques are used. - Scientists believe that there are about 50
controllable traits in plants that can be
produced through plant breeding.
5Heredity and Reproduction
- Controllable traits include
- Palatability
- Heat and drought tolerance
- Shape and color
- Oil
- Starch, sugar, protein
- Fiber content, height, salt tolerance, flavor
- Texture, and time to maturity
6Objectives
- 1. How is inheritance of traits in plants
regulated? - 2. How do dominant and recessive genes affect
plant characteristics? - 3. How does pollination in plants occur?
- 4. Why are some plants unable to self pollinate?
- 5. How do scientists use principles of plant
genetics to guide their plant breeding programs? - 6. How is biotechnology being used to supplement
traditional plant breeding programs?
7Answer these questions
- 1. What is selective breeding?
- 2. Identify five controllable traits that
scientists can control. - 3. Which types of combinations are used in
plant breeding. - 4. What percent does hybridization increase
yield by. - 5. When and what was the first major
breakthrough in plant breeding?
8Flowering and Pollination
- Two major plant classifications are the
Gymnosperms and the Angiosperms. - These include flowering plants, grasses, and
cereals.
9Flowering and Pollination
- All angiosperms develop flowers which contain one
or more ovules that are enclosed in an ovary or
carpel. - The flower is the reproductive structure for the
angiosperms.
10Flowering and Pollination
- A flower is complete if it has all four of the
following structures - Sepals, Petals, Stamens, and a Carpel (pistil)
11Flowering and Pollination
- An incomplete flower lacks one or more of the
before mentioned structures.
12Flowering and Pollination
- A flower that has both stamens (male reproductive
tissues) and a carpel (female reproductive
tissues) is a perfect flower. - Imperfect flowers have either stamens or a
carpel, but not both.
13Answer These Questions
- 1. Identify the two major classifications of
plants. - 2. The flower is the ____________ of the
angiosperms. - 3. A complete flower has four structures,
identify them. - 4. A flower which has both male and female is
tissues is which type of flower? - 5. If a flower has either stamen or a carpel,
which type of flower is this?
14Flowering and Pollination
- The sepals and petals help to attract insects to
the plant by producing a sugary solution called
nectar.
15Flowering and Pollination
- An incomplete flower is one which has no sepals
or petals. - Most cereal and grass plants have incomplete
flowers, which makes the flowers less visible.
16Flowering and Pollination
- Flowering is initiated by
- Length of uninterrupted darkness (photoperiodism)
- Exposure to low temperatures (vernalization)
- Morphological maturity (able to produce seed)
17Flowering and Pollination
- The majority of food-producing plants induce
flowering without external stimulation. - As long as they are actively growing, they
initiate flowers at almost any temperature or day
length.
18Flowering and Pollination
- The Stamen, consists of the Anthers and their
supporting their supporting filament. - The development of pollen grains (microspores)
occurs in the Anthers.
19Flowering and Pollination
- As the Anther matures, they break open and pollen
grains are spread by the wind and insects.
20Flowering and Pollination
- The Carpel, includes the Stigma, Style, and
Ovary. - The Stigma is the swollen end of the Style, is
colorful and allows for the pollen to stick. - Pollen grain must land on the Stigma in order for
pollination to occur.
21Answer these questions
- 1. What does the Carpel include?
- 2. Where does the development of the pollen
grain occur. - 3. What is the photoperiodism?
- 4. What is meant by morphological maturity?
- 5. A flower which has no sepals or petals is
which type of flower.
22Flowering and Pollination
- Self-pollination occurs when the anther and the
stigma are from the same flower. - From different flowers on the same plant.
- From different plants of the same cultivar or
variety. - Cross-pollination involves different flowers on
plants or different cultivars.
23Flowering and Pollination
- Some plants are self-fertile and produce fruit
and seed without the transfer of pollen form
another cultivar. - Most monocot plants.
24Flowering and Pollination
- A plant is considered self-sterile if it requires
pollen from another plant in order to set fruit. - Sterility is due to the protein composition of
the cell of wall of pollen grains. - The protein sends a signal to the stigma
indicating whether the pollen is from its own
species or the same plant.
25Flowering and Pollination
- Each pollen grain contains a tube cell and a
generative cell. - When the pollen lands on the stigma, germination
occurs.
26Flowering and Pollination
- The tube cell forms a pollen tube that grows
through the stigma and style.
- The pollen tube enters the nucleus of the ovule
by passing through the Micropyle
27Flowering and Pollination
- The generative cell has produced two male gametes
through the process of Mitosis.
28Flowering and Pollination
- One gamete unites with the egg cell to form the
Zygote, which form the embryo. - The other male gamete unites with the polar
nucleus in the ovule to form the endosperm. - The endosperm the seeds food reserve for
germination.
29Flowering and Pollination
- The time between pollination and fertilization in
most angiosperms is 24 to 48 hours. - Once fertilization has occurred, the ovule
becomes the seed and the ovary becomes the fruit.
30Answer These Questions
- 1. What is the time between pollination and
fertilization. - 2. How many male gametes are produced through
mitosis? - 3. What is the function of the gametes?
- 4. Pollen enters the nucleus by passing through
what opening? - 5. What causes sterility.
31Genetics and Heredity
- The nucleus of a living cell contains
Chromosomes. - Chromosomes contain information about the genetic
makeup of the plant. - They transmit the information to offspring.
32Genetics and Heredity
- Each plant species has the same number of
chromosomes in all vegetative cells. - Sex cells have half the number of chromosomes as
vegetative cells.
33Genetics and Heredity
- Chromosomes are long, thread-like structures
consisting of DNA (deoxyriboneucleic acid), RNA
(ribonucleic acid), and consisting of proteins.
34Genetics and Heredity
- Genes organic bases located along DNA molecules.
- The gene is the heredity unit of a plant.
35Answer these questions
- 1. Why do vegetative and reproductive cells have
varying numbers of chromosomes? - 2. Which type of material do chromosomes
contain? - 3. What does DNA stand for?
- 4. What does RNA stand for?
- 5. What is a gene?
36Genetics and Heredity
- Chromosomes are usually found in pairs in each
vegetative cell. - These are called Homologous Chromosomes.
- They have the same genes affecting the same
traits and are located at the same position along
the chromosomes.
37Genetics and Heredity
- Matching genes on Homologous Chromosomes are
called Alleles. - Gene alleles always occur on the same Locus
(location) along the pair of chromosomes. - Allelic genes can be dominant or recessive.
38Genetics and Heredity
- A dominant gene causes a certain characteristic
to be expressed. - A recessive gene causes the character to be
expressed only if the alleles from both parents
are recessive. - Dominant genes are represented by capital
letters. - Recessive genes are represented by small letters.
39Genetics and Heredity
- Meiosis controls the formation of egg and sperm
cells. - As gametes are formed, the two alleles for a
particular trait separate (segregate). - They segregate randomly so that each gamete
receives one allele or the other.
40Genetics and Heredity
- The allele composition of a plant is the
Genotype.
41Genetics and Heredity
- A common method of predicting the genotypes and
phenotypes of offspring is the Punnett Square.
42Answer these questions
- 1. A common method for determining phenotypes
and genotypes is the? - 2. The allele composition of a plant is known as
the? - 3. What is a homologous chromosome?
- 4. Meiosis controls formation of which two sex
cells? - 5. Allelic chromosomes can be of two types,
identify them.
43Plant Breeding
- Plant Breeding the process of selectively
mating plants. - A basic type of plant breeding is Selection.
- Selection is when two plants with desirable
traits are chosen from a population and then
reproduced.
44Plant Breeding
- Hybridization the crossing of two plants that
have different genotypes. - Crossbreeding usually produces a plant that is
more vigorous in growth that either of its two
parents. - Hybrids do not pass many of their traits to their
offspring, so parent stocks must be crossed each
year to produce new seed.
45Plant Breeding
- The production of hybrid seed is managed by
production organizations. - Growers are under contract to grow the parent
lines and make the hybrids. - Seed production fields must be isolated from
other fields to prevent unwanted
cross-pollination.
46Plant Breeding
- When tassels begin to emerge, the female plants
are detassled to prevent self-pollination. - The wind then cross-pollinates the male parent
with the female to produce hybrid seed.
47Plant Breeding
- Inbreeding the process of crossing two similar
parents. - After inbreeding five to seven generations,
certain phenotypes will be expressed.
Single Cross Inbred parent A x Inbred Parent
B Single cross AxB
Three Way Cross Inbred parent A x Inbred Parent
B Single Cross AxB x Unrelated Inbred C Three-way
cross (AxB) x C
48Plant Breeding
- Backcrossing offspring are continuously crossed
with one of the parents.
49Biotechnology Techniques
- Biotechnology the management of biological
systems for the benefit of humanity. - Biotech uses molecular biology and molecular
genetics for developing plant breeding methods. - These include tissue culture, protoplast fusion,
embryo manipulation, recombinant DNA.
50Biotechnology Techniques
- Micropropagation the propagation (asexual) of
plant cells or tissues in a closed container. - Cell culture modifying the genetic makeup of the
cell and then regenerating plants with desired
traits.
51Biotechnology Techniques
- Microinjection the mechanical insertion of
genetic material into a single, living cell. - Cell walls can be dissolved using enzymes.
- This exposes the cells protoplast.
- This allows the genetic makeup of different
plants to be fused together.
52Biotechnology Techniques
- Recombinant DNA or genetic engineering involve
- 1. Gene splicing
- 2. Replication
- 3. Transfer of genes to other organisms
- Transgenic organisms would carry in their cells a
foreign gene.
53Biotechnology Techniques
- 1. Starts with cutting gene with an enzyme.
- 2. The sliced gene is then removed and inserted
into a circular DNA molecules called plasmids
found in bacteria.
54Biotechnology Techniques
- 3. An enzyme is used to seal the spliced ends.
- 4. The DNA plasmid is inserted into a cell
selected for alteration. - 5. The result is a new sequence of DNA.
55Answer these Questions
- 1. What three items does genetic engineering
include? - 2. What is micro-injection?
- 3. What is cell culture?
- 4. What is biotechnology?
- 5. Describe the process of gene splicing?