Title: Mendel
1Mendels Laws of Heredity
- Why we look the way we look...
2What is heredity?
- The passing on of characteristics (traits) from
parents to offspring - Genetics is the study of heredity
3Mendel used peas...
- They reproduce sexually
- They have two distinct, male and female, sex
cells - Their traits are easy to isolate
4What Did Mendel Find?
- He discovered different laws and rules that
explain factors affecting heredity.
5Rule of Unit Factors
- Each organism has two alleles for each trait
- Alleles - different forms of the same gene
- Genes - located on chromosomes, they control how
an organism develops
6Rule of Dominance
- The trait that is observed in the offspring is
the dominant trait (uppercase) - The trait that disappears in the offspring is the
recessive trait (lowercase)
7Heterozygous Homozygous
- Heterozygous - if the two alleles for a trait are
different (Aa) - Homozygous - if the two alleles for a trait are
the same (AA or aa)
8Heredity
- The two alleles for a trait must separate when
the sex cells are formed - A parent randomly passes only one allele for each
trait to each offspring
9Heredity
- The genes for different traits are inherited
independently of each other.
10Phenotype Genotype
- Phenotype - the way an organism looks
- red hair or brown hair
- genotype - the gene combination of an organism
- AA or Aa or aa
11Incomplete Dominance
Neither allele is dominant so there is a blending
of traits when two different alleles for the same
trait occur together. The offspring have a mix of
their parents.
12Incomplete Dominance
Heterozygous individuals 3rd
phenotype
13Incomplete Dominance
- In Four O Clocks,
- if you cross a red
- (which is always pure)
- with a white (that is
- also always pure),
- you get a pink
- (which is alwaysa hybrid).
14Incomplete Dominance
Cross of two pink flowers
What are the possibilities?
genotype ratio
phenotype ratio
15 16Multiple Alleles
- Some human traits are controlled by a single gene
that has two or more alleles. - Three or more forms of a gene that code for a
single trait. - In this pattern of inheritance, the genes have
more than two alleles controlling them.
17Multiple Alleles
- Even though a gene may have
- multiple alleles, a person can
- only carry two of those alleles.
- Chromosomes exist in pairs
- Each chromosome in a pair
- only carries one allele for each
- gene
18Multiple Alleles
- Blood type in humans is an example of this
inheritance pattern. - The four different blood groups
- A, B, O, and AB
- Are produced by three different alleles
- A, B, and O
19Multiple Alleles
Examples of Blood type crosses
20Blood Type
Practice Problems A mother is AB and a father is
O. Draw the Punnett square. A
B O O What is the probability their
offspring will have A type blood? ____ Can they
have an offspring with O blood?
21Polygenic Traits
22Polygenic Traits
Some human traits show a large number of
phenotypes because the traits are controlled by
many genes. The genes act together as a group to
produce a single trait.
23Polygenic Traits
- Traits controlled by two or more genes
- Show a wide range of phenotypes
- The phenotype is produced by the interaction
of more than 1 pairof genes.
24Polygenic Traits
- In humans,
- eye color,
- skin color, hair color are a few controlled by
many genes.
25Polygenic Traits
- Height is controlled by four genes working
together.
26Polygenic Traits
- Skin color is controlled by at least three genes,
each one containing two different alleles.
Various combinations of alleles produce the many
skin colors in humans.
27Genetic Disorders
28Genetic Disorder
- An abnormal condition that a person inherits
through genes or - chromosomes.
- Genetic disorders are caused
- by mutations.
- Down syndrome and cystic fibrosis are two
examples of genetic disorders.
29Genetic Recessive Disorders
- Many human genetic disorders are caused by
recessive genes. - Occur when both parents have the recessive allele
for the disorder. - Parents may be heterozygous and have no symptoms
and pass the trait onto any offspring.
30Sex-linked Genetics
Ex. Colorblindness
31Boy or Girl?
- The gender of a baby is determined by genes on
chromosomes. - There are 23 pairs of chromosomes in each of our
cells. One of pair of - chromosomes are called sex
- chromosomes.
32Boy or Girl?
- The sex chromosomes determine whether a person is
- male or female.
- The sex chromosomes are the only pair of
chromosomes that do not always match.
33- Females
- Two sex chromosomes match XX
- Since both chromosomes are X, all eggs carry one
X chromosome.
34- Males
- Two sex chromosomes dont match XY, so sperm
cells will either carry an X or a Y chromosome.
35Sex-Linked Genes
- Some human traits occur more
- often in one gender than the other.
- Sex-Linked Genes Genes on the X and Y
chromosomes, whose alleles are passed from parent
to offspring on sex chromosomes
36Sex Linked Gene
- In females, a dominant allele on one X chromosome
will mask a recessive allele on the other X
chromosome. - In males, there is no matching allele on the X
and Y chromosome. As a result, any allele on the
X chromosome will produce the trait in a male who
inherits it.
37Sex-Linked Genes
- Because males have only one X chromosome, males
are more likely than females to have a sex-linked
trait that is controlled by a recessive allele.
38Sex-Linked Punnett Square
- Let C Normal Vision c Colorblind
- Cross Normal Male ( ) x Carrier Female (
) -
-
-
39Pedigree
40Pedigree
- Pedigree A chart or family tree that tracks
which members of a family have a particular trait
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