Title: Mendelian Genetics
1Chapter 14
2Important Terms
- Character--something that is inherited.
- Flower color
- Trait--a variant of a character.
- Purple flower vs. white flower
- True breeding--produces only one type of
offspring. - No variation of traits.
3Important Terms
- Hybridization--crossing of two variants of a true
breeding plants. The hybrid contains genes from
both parents which likely come out in the next
generation.
4Important Terms
- P generation--Usually true breeding and start the
experiment. - F1 generation--1st filial which are hybrid
offspring of the parents. - F2 generation--2nd filial which is offspring of
the hybrids. This is when we start to see the
traits reappear from the P generation.
5Mendel
- By examining the P, F1 and F2 generations, Mendel
was able to elucidate the patterns of inheritance.
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7Mendel
- What made Mendels work so good was that he kept
excellent records of what he did and the results
of his experiments.
8Mendel
- At the time, people believe in a blending
hypothesis. They believed that the traits of a
particular organism would be blended together. - Mendels experiments abolished this notion.
9Mendel
- Mendel crossed true-breeding purple flowers and
true-breeding white flowers and the offspring
(F1) were all purple. - When he crossed the F1 purple flowers, he got
purple and white in a 31 ratio. - He determined that purple was dominant to white.
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11Mendel
- The blending hypothesis was wiped out because
none of the flowers were pale purple. - He also gave rise to the term heritable factor
which we now call genes. He said heritable
factors must somehow determine flower color.
12Mendels 4 Part Model to Explain What He Saw
- 1. Alternative versions of genes account for
variations in inherited characteristics.
13In Todays Terminology
- Each gene resides on a specific locus on a
specific c-some. The DNA at this locus can vary
in its sequence of nucleotides and thus its
information. - The sequence of nucleotides, in this case, can
change the flower color. - The alleles are due to variations in the DNA.
14Mendels 4 Part Model to Explain What He Saw
- 2. For each character, an organism inherits 2
alleles, one from each parent. - This was a remarkable deduction from Mendel
considering he knew nothing about c-somes or
ploidy.
15Mendels 4 Part Model to Explain What He Saw
- 3. If 2 alleles at a locus differ, then the
dominant allele determines the organisms
appearance while the recessive allele gets masked
and no noticeable change in the organisms
appearance can be seen.
16Mendels 4 Part Model to Explain What He Saw
- 4. The 2 alleles for a heritable characteristic
segregate during gamete formation and end up in
different gametes. This makes up what is known
as the Law of Segregation.
17The Law of Segregation
- In terms of chromosomes, the homologous
chromosomes are being separated and distributed
to different gametes during meiosis.
18Law of Segregation
- If different alleles are present, there is a
50/50 chance that the gamete will receive a copy
of one gene vs. another.
19Law of Segregation
- If the alleles are the same, each gamete contains
the same copy of the gene and it is said to be
true-breeding for a particular trait.
20The Observed 31 Ratio
- Can the segregation of gametes account for the
31 ratio Mendel observed? - Using a Punnett square, you find the answer is
yes. - Examine the genotypes and the phenotypes.
21More Useful Terms
- Homozygous--organisms with identical alleles for
a trait in question. - Heterozygous--organisms with different alleles
for a trait in question. - Phenotype--the outward appearance of an organism.
- Genotype--the genetic makeup of an organism.
22A Test Cross
- Suppose we have a purple flower and we want to
know if it is homozygous dominant or
heterozygous, (recessive will be white). - To do this, cross the organism with a homozygous
recessive and observe the offspring. If any
white are produced, the trait is said to be
heterozygous, and will be produced in a 11 ratio.
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24The Law of Segregation
- Applies to all genes on a particular chromosome.
Says that all genes segregate independently of
each other regardless of what phenotype they are
carrying so long as each gamete contains one copy
of each trait.
25Law of Segregation
- Mendel demonstrated this using a dihybrid cross.
- He wanted to see if the gametes contained genes
of all possible combinations or if certain genes
went with certain other genes.
26The Cross
- Plants producing yellow colored, round seeds were
crossed with plants producing green colored,
wrinkled seeds. - If they assort independently, a 9331 ratio
should be produced. - If they dont assort independently, if they are
somehow linked, a different ratio will be
observed.
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28Conclusions
- From the cross, Mendel concluded that no matter
how many characteristics are observed, they
always segregate independently of one another.
29The Law of Independent Assortment
- As a result of Mendels breeding experiment with
dihybrid crosses, he arrived at what is known as
the Law of Independent Assortment which says that
all alleles of a gene pair will segregate
independently of other pairs during gamete
formation. - This law only applies to genes residing on
different chromosomes.
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31Rules Regarding Probability
- The probability scale ranges from 0 to 1, zero is
not going to happen, 1 is its certain to happen. - The probability of all possible outcomes is 1,
and all outcomes of a particular event are
independent each other--they have no bearing on
what has happened or what will happen.
322 Rules
- Two rules help us determine the probability of
chance events. - 1. The multiplication rule.
- 2. The addition rule.
33The Multiplication Rule
- To determine the probable outcome of a chance
event, multiply the probability of each possible
outcome. - Coin example 1/2 1/2 1/4
34The Multiplication Rule
- Another example Suppose we roll one die
followed by another and want to find the
probability of rolling a 4 on the first die and
rolling an even number on the second die. - P(4) 1/6
- P(even) 3/6
- The probability of rolling a 4 and an even is 1/6
3/6 3/36, or 1/12.
35The Addition Rule
- Allows us to determine the probability of any
mutually exclusive events by adding together
their individual probabilities.
36The Addition Rule
- For instance
- Suppose you are going to pull one card out of a
deck. - What is the probability of pulling a king or an
ace? - P(King) 4/52
- P(Ace) 4/52
- The probability of pulling a King or an Ace is
4/52 4/52, which is 8/52, or 2/13. - There is a 2 in 13 chance of pulling a King or an
Ace.
Each are mutually exclusive
37The Addition Rule
- So, how does this apply to us?
- Use a monohybrid heterozygous F2 cross to
illustrate. - What is the possibility of getting a heterozygous
F2 offspring? - 1/4 1/4 1/2
- 1/2 of the offspring should be heterozygous.
38Dominance
- There are varying degrees of dominance. Some
characters are completely dominant to others.
For instance, purple is completely dominant to
white round is completely dominant to wrinkled. - When you begin looking at things, there are
varying forms of dominance.
39Complete Dominance
- Mendels peas showed complete dominance. One
trait was completely dominant to another (purple
to white).
40Codominance
- Another extreme is codominance where an organism
has 2 different alleles that affect the phenotype
in separate, distinguishable ways. A common
example is with cystic fibrosis. - CF causes the patients body to produce a thick,
sticky mucous that clogs airways and ducts
leading from the pancreas to the intestine. This
causes a whole host of problems.
41Cystic Fibrosis and Codominance
- The CF gene is found on the long arm of c-some 7.
- Codes for CFTR protein.
42CFTR Function
- CFTR acts as an ion gate which allows for the
movement of Cl- in and out of the cell. - Patients with the CF gene make a dysfunctional
protein which keeps the gate closed causing the
Cl- to build up. The cell then produces a thick
mucous in response to this causing the symptoms
of the disease.
43Codominance at the Molecular Level
- Most people have 2 normal copies of the allele
for CFTR and make a functional CFTR protein. - People with CF have 2 mutant copies of the allele
and produce only dysfunctional CFTR. - Heterozygotes produce one good copy and one bad
copy.
44Codominance at the Molecular Level
- These heterozygotes produce enough functional
CFTR protein to allow for normal Cl- transport
and no adverse effects seen. Thus, even though
the genes are codominant, symptoms remain
recessive on the physiological level.
45Incomplete Dominance
- Some alleles exhibit incomplete
dominance--certain characteristics fall somewhere
in between the phenotypes of the 2 homozygotes. - For example The flowering time of Mendels peas
and the color of certain flowers.
46Incomplete Dominance
- Mendel knew he had peas that flowered shortly
after germination and some that took a long time
to flower. - When he crossed them, he found that their
offspring produced flowers somewhere in between
when the two homozygotes flowering time.
47Incomplete Dominance
- With pink snapdragons, a red and a white will
produce a pink flower--incomplete dominance.
Why is it not blending?
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49Complete Dominance, Incomplete Dominance and
Codominance--A Summary
- If you look at the organismal level (outward
phenotype based on alleles) vs. the biochemical
level (the way the metabolism functions) vs. the
molecular level (the proteins/enzymes that are
made) can play a large role in determining
complete dominance, incomplete dominance and
codominance.
50Multiple Alleles
- Thus far we have been talking about 2 alleles
that govern certain traits. Often times there
are multiple alleles that govern traits within a
population. - For example
- 3 alleles which code for 4 different blood types.
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52Pleiotropy Multiple Phenotypes
- Most genes exhibit what is known as pleiotropy
which is where one gene has multiple phenotypic
effects. - Example CF and sickle cell anemia
53Gene Masking--Epistasis
- Epistasis occurs when one gene alters the
phenotypic expression of another gene. - This example occurs in the coat color of mice.
- Black, brown, albino
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55Polygenic Inheritance
- The opposite of pleiotrophy (one gene, many
characteristics) is polygenic inheritance which
is the case where many genes act on a single
characteristic. - For example skin color is determined by at
least 3 separately inherited genes. Variations
of the genotype of these individuals produces all
of the varieties of skin color we see.
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57Genetic Disorders
- Many are recessive traits.
- Easily propogated because heterozygotes dont
display outward characteristics--they are
carriers. - Tay-Sachs, CF, sickle-cell
58Genetic Disorders
- Some disorders come from dominant alleles.
- Dwarfism, Huningtons Disease.
- Lethal dominants are much less common because
they are less likely to be passed through the
gene pool--for obvious reasons.