* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Genetics - youngbloodbiology
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Hybrid (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Behavioural genetics wikipedia , lookup
Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance wikipedia , lookup
Genetically modified crops wikipedia , lookup
Heritability of IQ wikipedia , lookup
Hardy–Weinberg principle wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Genetics Gregor Mendel: "father of genetics" Blending Theory of Inheritance - offspring of two parents "blend" the traits of both parents Particulate Theory of Inheritance - traits are inherited as "particles", offspring receive a "particle" from each parent. Evidence for Particulate Theory of Inheritance: A plant with purple flowers is crossed with another plant that has purple flowers. Some of the offspring have white flowers (wow!). Mendel set out to discover how this could happen. Some stuff on Mendel * parents were farmers * he became ordained as a priest * studied science and mathemathics at the University of Vienna Mendel's Experiments Mendel chose pea plants as his experimental subjects, mainly because they were easy to cross and showed a variety of contrasting traits (purple vs white flowers, tall vs short stems, round vs wrinkled seeds) 1. Mendel chose true-breeding lines of each plant/trait he studied (true breeding lines always produced offspring of the same type) 2. He crossed a true breeding plant with a plant of the opposite trait (purple x white). He called this the Parental (P) generation. 3. He recorded data on the offspring of this cross (First Filial, F1) 4. He self pollinated the F1 offspring 5. He recorded data on the offspring of the second generation, calling it the Second Filial generation (F2) Analysis: * The F1 generation always displayed one trait (he later called this the dominant trait) * The F1 generation must have within it the trait from the original parents - the white trait * The F2 generation displayed the hidden trait, 1/4 of the F2 generation had it (he later called this hidden trait the recessive trait) * Each individual has two "factors" that determine what external appearance the offspring will have. (We now call these factors genes or alleles) Mendel established three principles (or Laws) from his research 1. The Principle of Dominance and Recessiveness - one trait is masked or covered up by another trait 2. Principle of Segregation - the two factors (alleles) for a trait separate during gamete formation 3. Principle of Independent Assortment - factors of a trait separate independently of one another during gamete formation; another way to look at this is, whether a flower is purple has nothing to do with the length of the plants stems - each trait is independently inherited Modern Genetics Mendel's factors are now called ALLELES. For every trait a person have, two alleles determine how that trait is expressed. We use letters to denote alleles, since every gene has two alleles, all genes can be represented by a pair of letters. PP = purple, Pp = purple, pp = white Homozogyous: when the individual is said to Letters designating a capital or lowercase, AA, bb, EE, dd alleles are the same, the be homozygous, or true breeding. homozgyous individual could be as long as they are the same. Ex. Heterozygous: when the alleles are different, in this case the DOMINANT allele is expressed. Ex. Pp, Aa Monohybrid cross = a cross involving one pair of contrasting traits. Ex. Pp x Pp Punnet Square: used to determine the PROBABILITY of having a certain type of offspring given the alleles of the parents Genotype: letters used to denote alleles (BB, Pp..etc) Phenotype: what an organism looks like (brown, purple..) How to Solve a Punnet Square 1. Determine the genotypes (letters) of the parents. Bb x Bb 2. Set up the punnet square with one parent on each side. 3. Fill out the Punnet square middle 4. Analyze the number of offspring of each type. In pea plants, round seeds are dominant to wrinkled. The genotypes and phenotypes are: RR = round Rr = round rr = wrinkle If you get stuck make a "key". Sometimes the problems won't give you obvious information. Example: In radishes, a bent root is a dominant trait, though some roots are straight (which is recessive). If a straight rooted plant is crossed with a heterozyous bent root plant, how many of the offspring will have straight roots? Say what? First of all, this problem doesn't make it easy. Start by assigning genotypes and phenotypes. Pick the letter of the dominant trait. B for bent BB = bent Bb = bent bb = straight Now use the key to figure out your parents. In this case you have a straight root plant (bb) crossed with a heterozyous bent plant (Bb). Once you've figured that out, the cross is simple! If a heteroyzous round seed is crossed with itself (Rr x Rr) a punnett square can help you figure out the ratios of the offspring. Incomplete Dominance & Codominance There is no dominant or recessive, the heterozygous condition results in a "blending" of the two traits. Example: Snapdragons can be red, white, or pink (heterozygous) You cross a heterozygous pink flowering plant (Rr) with another heterozygous pink flowering plant (Rr). Diagram a punnett square that shows this cross and the possible offspring. Dihybrid Crosses: Crosses that involve 2 traits. For these crosses your punnet square needs to be 4x4 In any case where the parents are heterozygous for both traits (AaBb x AaBb) you will get a 9:3:3:1 ratio. If you cross other combinations, you will need to do a square. Try RrYy x rryy. Click to see solution. Sex Linked Traits The genes for these traits are on the X chromosome, because boys only receive one X chromosome they are more likely to inherit disorders passed to them from their mother who would be a carrier. Hemophilia and Colorblindness are sex linked traits, the punnet square below shows how a woman who is a carrier passes the trait to her son, but not her daughters. Muliple Allele Traits Traits that are controlled by more than two alleles. Blood type in humans is controlled by three alleles: A, B, and O Phenotype Genotype A IaIa B IbIb or Ib i AB IaIb O ii Iai Examples of Blood type crosses Blood Transfusions Blood can only be transferred to a body of a person who's immune system will "recognize" the blood. A and B are antigens on the blood that will be recognized. If the antigen is unfamiliar to the body, your body will attack and destroy the transfused blood as if it were a hostile invader (which can cause death). O is like a blank, it has no antigens. O is called the universal donor because a person can receive a transfusion from O blood without having an immune response AB is the universal AB blood has both the A body, A and B blood can well as O) and the body attack. acceptor, because a person with and B antigens already in the be transfused to the person (as will recognize it and not Polygenic Traits Traits controlled by many genes: hair color, height weight, intelligence Sex Influenced Traits Traits are influenced by the environment. Pattern baldness affects men because testosterone activates the genes. Environmentally Influenced Traits Siamese cats have dark ears and feet due to the temperature. Height in humans is influenced by the environment (diet)