Title: Mendel
1Mendels Laws of Heredity
- - Monohybrid Crosses
- - Phenotypes and Genotypes
- - Dominant vs. Recessive Traits
2Gregor Mendel
- Gregor Mendel is the Austrian monk turned
scientist who did pioneering work in the study of
how physical characteristics are inherited. - He is often referred to as the Father of
Genetics - He used garden pea plants for his experiments
because they reproduce sexually so they have
gametes.
3More on Peas..
- In peas, both male and female gametes are in the
same flower. The male is in the pollen grain,
and the female is in the ovule. - Fertilization occurs when the male gamete in the
pollen grain meets and fuses with the female
gamete in the ovule. This transfer is called
pollination and a seed results.
4Mendel, a Careful Researcher!
- Mendel controlled his experiments and peas he
used by only studying one trait at a time to
control variables, and analyzed data
mathematically. - If he was looking at tallness he only chose
plants that were tall for many generations and
always produced tall offspring. These are said
to be true breeding or pure for tallness.
5 Monohybrid Crosses
- Mendel took these tall and short pea plants and
crossed them (cross pollination) to produce new
plants. - This is a
- Monohybrid cross because they only differ by one
trait - height. - So what did he find.?????
6Offspring
- He found that all of the offspring in the first
generation were as tall as the taller parent. It
was as if the shorter parent never existed! - Then he crossed two of the offspring (look tall)
and 3/4 of their offspring were as tall as the
tall plants in the parent generation, and 1/4
were as short as the ones in the parent
generation.
7 Some Terms to Know
- The original parents are known as the P1
generation. (P stands for parent) - The offspring of the parent are known as the F1
generation. (F stands for filial or son or
daughter) - When two F1 offspring are crossed their offspring
are called the F2 generation or the second filial
generation.
8Multiple Alleles
- Mendel did this for seven different pairs of
traits. In every cross he found that one trait
seemed to disappear in the F1 generation only to
reappear unchanged in one-fourth of the F2
plants. - Each of these traits has two factors which are
genes located on chromosomes. Genes exist in
alternative forms called alleles.
9Dominance
- Remember how in the F1 generation offspring were
all tall? That means only one trait was
observed. Mendel called this the dominant trait
and the one that disapeared he called recessive. - So in this experiment the allele for short plants
is recessive and tall is dominant.
10The Law of Segregation
- To explain why the shortness reappeared Mendel
concluded that the two alleles for each trait
must separate when gametes are formed. - So a parent passes on at random only one allele
for each trait to each offspring. This is called
the Law of Segregation
11Genotype and Phenotype
- Two organisms can look alike but have different
gene combinations. The way an organism looks is
its phenotype (tall, blonde, etc.) - The gene combination an organism contains is its
genotype. The genotype of a tall plant that has
two alleles for tallness is TT.
12Homozygous and Heterozygous
- An organism is homozygous for a trait if its two
alleles for the trait are the same like TT
(homozygous dominant) or tt (homozygous
recessive) PURE - An organism is heterozygous for a trait if its
two alleles for the trait are different. So Tt is
heterozygous for the height trait. HYBRID
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14Law of Independent Assortment
- Mendel performed dihybrid crosses in plants that
were true-breeding for two traits. For example, a
plant that had green pod color and yellow seed
color was cross-pollinated with a plant that had
yellow pod color and green seeds. In this cross,
the traits for green pod color (GG) and yellow
seed color (YY) are dominant. Yellow pod color
(gg) and green seed color (yy) are recessive. - What did he find out?
15Independent Assortment Contd
The resulting offspring or F1 generation were all
heterozygous for green pod color and yellow seeds
(GgYy).
After observing the results of the dihybrid
cross, Mendel allowed all of the F1 plants to
self-pollinate.
16Independent Assortment
He referred to these offspring as the F2
generation. Mendel noticed a 9331 ratio. About
9 of the F2 plants had green pods and yellow
seeds, 3 had green pods and green seeds, 3 had
yellow pods and yellow seeds and 1 had a yellow
pod and green seeds.
17Independent Assortment
- From these experiments Mendel formulated what is
now known as Mendel's law of independent
assortment. - This law states that allele pairs separate
independently during the formation of gametes. - Therefore, traits are transmitted to offspring
independently of one another.