Title: Basic genetics
1Basic genetics
- Haixu Tang
- School of Informatics
2Mendels two innovations
- Developed pure lines
- a population that breeds true for a particular
trait - Counted his results and kept statistical notes
3Phenotypes of Mendel's pea plants
- round or wrinkled seed phenotype
- yellow or green seed phenotype
- red or white flower phenotype
- tall or dwarf plant phenotype
4Results from Mendel's Experiments
Parental Cross F1 Phenotype F2 Phenotypic Ratio F2 Ratio
Round x Wrinkled Seed Round 5474 Round1850 Wrinkled 2.961
Yellow x Green Seeds Yellow 6022 Yellow2001 Green 3.011
Red x White Flowers Red 705 Red224 White 3.151
Tall x Dwarf Plants Tall l787 Tall227 Dwarf 2.841
5Phenotypes
- Dominant - the allele that expresses itself at
the expense of an alternate allele the phenotype
that is expressed in the F1 generation from the
cross of two pure lines - Recessive - an allele whose expression is
suppressed in the presence of a dominant allele
the phenotype that disappears in the F1
generation from the cross of two pure lines and
reappears in the F2 generation
6Conclusion
- The hereditary determinants are of a particulate
nature. These determinants are called genes. - Each parent has a gene pair in each cell for each
trait studied. The F1 from a cross of two pure
lines contains one allele for the dominant
phenotype and one for the recessive phenotype.
These two alleles comprise the gene pair. - One member of the gene pair segregates into a
gamete, thus each gamete only carries one member
of the gene pair. - Gametes unite at random and irrespective of the
other gene pairs involved.
7Some terms
- Allele - one alternative form of a given allelic
pair tall and dwarf are the alleles for the
height of a pea plant more than two alleles can
exist for any specific gene, but only two of them
will be found within any individual - Allelic pair - the combination of two alleles
which comprise the gene pair - Homozygote - an individual which contains only
one allele at the allelic pair for example DD is
homozygous dominant and dd is homozygous
recessive pure lines are homozygous for the gene
of interest - Heterozygote - an individual which contains one
of each member of the gene pair for example the
Dd heterozygote - Genotype - the specific allelic combination for a
certain gene or set of genes
8F1 Symbol representation
9F2 Punnett Square
Union of GametesAt Random D d
Union of GametesAt Random D DD(Tall) Dd(Tall)
Union of GametesAt Random d Dd(Tall) dd(Short)
10Mendel's First Law
- The law of segregation during gamete formation
each member of the allelic pair separates from
the other member to form the genetic constitution
of the gamete
11Test the hypothesis
12Genotype of the F2 individuals
Phenotypes Genotypes Genetic Description
F2 Tall Plants 1/3 DD2/3 Dd Pure line homozygote dominantHeterozygotes
F2 Dwarf Plants all dd Pure line homozygote recessive
Thus the F2 is genotypically 1/4 Dd 1/2 Dd
1/4 dd
13Backcross Dd x dd
- The cross of an F1 hybrid to one of the
homozygous parents for pea plant height the
cross would be Dd x DD or Dd x dd most often,
though a backcross is a cross to a fully
recessive parent
Backcross One or (BC1) Phenotypes 1 Tall 1
Dwarf BC1 Genotypes 1 Dd 1 dd
14Monohybrid
- Monohybrid cross - a cross between parents that
differ at a single gene pair (usually AA x aa) - Monohybrid - the offspring of two parents that
are homozygous for alternate alleles of a gene
pair - Remember --- a monohybrid cross is not the cross
of two monohybrids.
15Variations to Mendel's First Law of Genetics
- Codominance - a relationship among alleles where
both alleles contribute to the phenotype of the
heterozygote - Incomplete dominance - the F1 produces a
phenotype quantitatively intermediate between the
two homozygous parents
16Pedigree Analysis
17Traits exhibiting dominant gene action
- affected individuals have at least one affected
parent - the phenotype generally appears every generation
- two unaffected parents only have unaffected
offspring
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19Traits exhibiting recessive gene action
- unaffected parents can have affected offspring
- affected progeny are both male and female
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21Mendel's Law of Independent Assortment
- We have followed the expression of only one gene.
Mendel also performed crosses in which he
followed the segregation of two genes. These
experiments formed the basis of his discovery of
his second law, the law of independent assortment.
22Dihybrid cross
- Dihybrid cross - a cross between two parents that
differ by two pairs of alleles (AABB x aabb) - Dihybrid- an individual heterozygous for two
pairs of alleles (AaBb)
23Mendels experiment
- Parental Cross Yellow, Round Seed x Green,
Wrinkled Seed - F1 Generation All yellow, round
- F2 Generation 9 Yellow, Round, 3 Yellow,
Wrinkled, 3 Green, Round, 1 Green, Wrinkled
Seed Color Yellow G Green g
Seed Shape Round W Wrinkled w
24Parental cross
25Female Gametes Female Gametes Female Gametes Female Gametes
GW Gw gW gw
GW GGWW (Yellow,round) GGWw (Yellow,round) GgWW (Yellow,round) GgWw (Yellow,round)
Male Gw GGWw (Yellow,round) GGww (Yellow,wrinkled) GgWw (Yellow,round) Ggww (Yellow,wrinkled)
Gametes gW GgWW (Yellow,round) GgWw (Yellow,round) ggWW (Green,round) ggWw (Green,ROUND)
gw GgWw (Yellow,round) Ggww (Yellow,wrinkled) ggWw (Green,round) ggww (Green,wrinkled)
26Phenotype General Genotype
9 Yellow, Round Seed G_W_
3 Yellow, Wrinkled Seed G_ww
3 Green, Round Seed ggW_
1 Green, Wrinkled Seed ggww
27Mendel's Second Law - the law of independent
assortment
- During gamete formation the segregation of the
alleles of one allelic pair is independent of the
segregation of the alleles of another allelic
pair.
28backcross - F1 dihybrid x
Female Gametes Female Gametes Female Gametes Female Gametes
GW Gw gW gw
MaleGametes gw GgWw(Yellow, round) Ggww(Yellow, wrinkled) ggWw(Green, round) ggww(Green, wrinkled)
- The phenotypic ratio of the test cross is
- 1 Yellow, Round Seed
- 1 Yellow, Wrinkled Seed
- 1 Green, Round Seed
- 1 Green, Wrinkled Seed
29The Chi-Square Test
- An important question to answer in any genetic
experiment is how can we decide if our data fits
any of the Mendelian ratios we have discussed. A
statistical test that can test out ratios is the
Chi-Square or Goodness of Fit test.
Degrees of freedom (df) n-1, where n is the
number of classes
30An example
Let's test the following data to determine if it
fits a 9331 ratio.
Observed Values Expected Values
315 Round, Yellow Seed (9/16)(556) 312.75 Round, Yellow Seed
108 Round, Green Seed (3/16)(556) 104.25 Round, Green Seed
101 Wrinkled, Yellow Seed (3/16)(556) 104.25 Wrinkled, Yellow
32 Wrinkled, Green (1/16)(556) 34.75 Wrinkled, Green
556 Total Seeds 556.00 Total Seeds
Number of classes (n) 4
df n-1 4-1 3 Chi-square value 0.47
31A Chi-Square Table
Probability Probability Probability Probability Probability
Degrees ofFreedom 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.05 0.01
1 0.02 0.46 2.71 3.84 6.64
2 0.21 1.39 4.61 5.99 9.21
3 0.58 2.37 6.25 7.82 11.35
4 1.06 3.36 7.78 9.49 13.28
5 1.61 4.35 9.24 11.07 15.09
32Pleiotropic Effects and Lethal Genes
- In 1904, a cross was made between a yellow-coated
mouse and a mouse with a gray coat. The gray-
coated mouse was extensively inbred and therefore
was considered to be pure bred.
33- Next a cross was made between two yellow mice.
What genetic ratio would we expect to see? Yy x
Yy should give a ratio of 3 yellow1 gray. The
result, though, was a ratio of 2 yellow to 1 gray
mice. How can this result be explained? Let's
first set up a Punnett Square.
34Testcross
- All testcross data with the yellow mice give a
11 ratio. This ratio is typical of what is seen
with heterozygous individuals. - All of the yellow mice from the cross of two
heterozygous yellow mice are genotypically Yy.
Somehow the YY genotype is lethal. The 21 ratio
is the typical ratio for a lethal gene.
35Lethal gene
- Lethal Gene - a gene that leads to the death of
an individual these can be either dominant or
recessive in nature. - Pleiotropic gene - a gene that affects more than
one phenotype
36Gene Interactions
Rose
Pea Single
Walnut
37Phenotypes Genotypes Frequency
Walnut R_P_ 9/16
Rose R_pp 3/16
Pea rrP_ 3/16
Single rrpp 1/16
38Epistasis
- The interaction between two or more genes to
control a single phenotype
39Modifier Genes
- Instead of masking the effects of another gene, a
gene can modify the expression of a second gene.
In mice, coat color is controlled by the B gene.
The B allele conditions black coat color and is
dominant to the b allele that produces a brown
coat. The intensity of the color, either black or
brown is controlled by another gene, the D gene.
At this gene, the dominant D allele controls full
color whereas the recessive d allele conditions a
dilute or faded expression of the color
expression at the B gene. Therefore, if a cross
is made among mice that are BdDd, the following
phenotypic distribution will be seen - 9 B_D_ (black)
- 3 B_dd (dilute black)
- 3 bbD_ (brown)
- 1 bbdd (dilute brown)
- The D gene does not mask the effect of the B
gene, rather it modifies its expression.
40Gene linkage
- One experiment was performed by Bateson and
Punnett with sweet peas. They performed a typical
dihybrid cross between one pure line with purple
flowers and long pollen grains and a second pure
line with red flowers and round pollen grains.
Because they knew that purple flowers and long
pollen grains were both dominant, they expected a
typical 9331 ratio when the F1 plants were
crossed.
41Observed Expected
Purple, long (P_L_) 284 215
Purple, round (P_ll) 21 71
Red, long (ppL_) 21 71
Red, round (ppll) 55 24
Total 381 381
42Linked Genes On The Same Chromosome
F1 Gamete Testcross Distribution Gamete Type
pr vg 1339 Parental
pr vg 151 Recombinant
pr vg 154 Recombinant
pr vg 1195 Parental
43Coupling and repulsion
F1 Gamete Testcross Distribution Gamete Type
pr vg 1339 Parental
pr vg 151 Recombinant
pr vg 154 Recombinant
pr vg 1195 Parental
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45Genotype Observed Type of Gamete
ABC 390 Parental
abc 374 Parental
AbC 27 Single-crossover between genes C and B
aBc 30 Single-crossover between genes C and B
ABc 5 Double-crossover
abC 8 Double-crossover
Abc 81 Single-crossover between genes A and C
aBC 85 Single-crossover between genes A and C
Total 1000
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