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Download TEXT Mendel`s Study of Heredity A. Gregor Johann Mendel
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TEXT Mendel’s Study of Heredity A. Gregor Johann Name : Birth date Place of birth : Death date : Place of death Nationality : Gender : Occupation : Mendel- an amazing monk Johann Gregor Mendel : July 22, 1822 Hyncice, Czechoslovakia January 6, 1884 : Brünn, Bohemia Moravian Male Natural Scientist The first person to gain some understanding of the principles of heredity was Gregor Johann Mendel (Fig. 1). He was born in an ethnic German family on July 22,1822 in the village of Heizendorf in north Moravia, Austria (now Hyncice, Czech Republic). Mendel was son of a peasant (farmer) and the grandson of a gardener. As a child, Mendel benefited from the progressive education provided by the local vicar, and he was eventually enrolled at the Philosophical Institute in Olmutz (now Olomouc). During his childhood, he had to suffer on account of financial and health problems, which seriously interfered with his education. Unable to continue his studies due to worsening financial condition, he joined the Augustinian Monastery of Saint Thomas at Brünn (now Brno) in 1843 and became a friar. Born Johann Mendel, he took the name Gregor upon entering monastic life and eventually was placed in charge of the monastery’s experimental garden. Although Mendel felt no personal vocation at the time, he believed that the monastery would provide him the best opportunity to pursue his education without the financial worries. In 1851, he was sent to University of Vienna to study zoology, botany, chemistry, physics, mathematics, etc. Although Mendel was a sincere and hard working student, he did not do very well in his studies, particularly in physics and mathematics. After completing his studies, he returned to Brünn in 1854, where he was appointed as a substitute teacher in Brno Technical School. His performance as a science teacher was excellent, and it was here that he, for the first time, showed the glimpses of the genius within him. In addition, he worked as a priest in the local church; he lived in a house located within the premises of the church. Mendel believed that species are resistant to change, because characters are inherited without alteration throughout generations. This was a novel idea to breeders of the day. No one knew just how characteristics were inherited. Common experience showed that children resembled their parents, but it was not known how do various traits sort out in the union of sperm and egg. Likewise, it was not clear why some crosses of plants or livestock are sterile, and the others fertile. Darwin (Fig. 2) toyed with a hypothesis he called Pangenesis, which assumed that traits from all over the body somehow flow into the gametes. A common misconception of the time was that traits were blended in the offspring, rather than remaining as discrete units (by analogy, compare mixing two fluids versus mixing two jars of colored marbles). Darwin’s theory demanded that variations be heritable, and that traits be fluid enough to evolve so that they could be acted upon by natural selection. If the traits remain unchanged, like the colored marbles, how could new variation arise? Each generation would just get a different ratio of static, unchanging characteristics. Mendel performed experiments with several species of garden plants, and he even tried some experiments with honeybees. His greatest success, however, was with peas. He conducted all his experiments within the kitchen garden of his house with the help of his own resources (Fig. 3). He began to collect pea seeds for his experiments in 1857 from commercial growers all over the Europe. His work is often cited as a textbook example of the experimental method. It required patience, attention to detail, careful record keeping, and interpretive insight. After seven years of pains-taking, sincere, devoted and exhaustive experimentation, he presented his findings before the Natural History Society of Brünn at two of its meetings on February 8 and March 8, 1865. This paper entitled “Experiments in plant hybridization” was presented in German language and was published in the annual proceedings of the Society in 1866. Later, Mendel became more and more involved with the work of monastery, and he was made an abbot in 1868. But he still found time to continue his studies on honey bees, some other plants, and on climatology. Gregor Mendel died on January 6, 1884 at the age of 62 years. Shortly before his death, Mendel said, “My scientific labors have brought me a great deal of satisfaction, and I am convinced that before long the entire world will praise the results of these labors”. Sixteen years after his demise, his paper languished in obscurity until 1900, when this paper was rediscovered by three botanists, Hugo de Vries (Fig. 4) in Holland, known for mutation theory and studies on the evening primrose and maize; Carl Correns (Fig. 5) in Germany, who investigated maize, peas and beans; and Eric von Tschemark–Seysenegg (Fig. 6) in Austria, who worked with several plants, including garden peas. As these men searched for the scientific literature for data supporting their own theories of heredity, each found that Mendel had performed a detailed and careful analysis 35 years earlier. Mendel’s ideas quickly gained acceptance, especially through the promotional efforts of William Bateson (Fig. 7), an English man, who gave this developing science the name “Genetics” in 1905. He coined the term from a Greek word meaning “to generate”. Gregor J. Mendel is appropriately called the father of Genetics. B. Selection of the experimental Material Mendel’s experiments were designed to investigate the most widely accepted model of inheritance, blending, which held that the traits of an offspring would be a blend of the parental traits. For example, the theory of blending predicts that a black and a white horse parents would give rise to a grey-colour offspring. Mendel’s results showed that for many simple traits, at least, this model was wrong. Instead, the offspring displayed traits in exactly the same form as they appeared in one or the other parent. One reason for Mendel’s success is that he chose his experimental material intelligently. The garden pea, Pisum sativum (Fig. 8), is a dicot, a type of plant that sprouts two leaves, or cotyledons, from a germinating seed. Garden pea offered several obvious advantages as an experimental material, about which Mendel was aware; these advantages are summarized below: i) In the garden pea varieties available commercially, several characters had two contrasting forms, which were easily distinguishable from each other (Table 1). This permitted an easy classification of F2 and F3 progeny from various crosses into clear-cut classes on the basis of the contrasting forms of different characters. Table 1: Description of the seven pairs of contrasting characters of pea studied by Mendel Character Dominant form Recessive form Seed form Round (smooth) Wrinkled Seed colour Yellow Green Flower colour Purple White Pod colour Green Yellow Pod shape Full (Inflated) Constricted Flower position Axial Terminal Stem height / Tall Dwarf length ii) One peculiarity of pea reproduction is that the petals of the flower close down tightly, preventing pollen grains from entering or leaving (Fig. 9). This enforces a system of self- fertilization, in which the male and female gametes from the same flower unite with each other to produce seeds (Fig. 10). As a result, the individual pea strains are highly inbred, displaying little, if any, genetic variation from one generation to the next. Because of this uniformity, we say that such strains are true-breeding. iii) Pea flowers are relatively large. Therefore, emasculation and pollination of pea flowers is quite easy, which allows easy artificial hybridization in pea (Fig. 11). iv) They have short life cycle, i.e. produce many generations in a short time (Fig. 12). v) Pea seeds are large and present no problem in germination. Peas are easily grown in experimental gardens or in pots. This permits a relatively large number of pea plants to be grown in a relatively small area. vi) They are easily grown in experimental garden or in pots in a green house. vii) They are very productive, which means they produce many seeds. C. Reasons for Mendel’s success The success of Mendel cannot be ascribed to a single factor. The following several factors acted together to bring Mendel the astounding success, where many of his predecessors had failed. a) b) Diagnosis of predecessors weaknesses: The most important factor that contributed to his success was his ability for an accurate and keen analysis of the reasons for the failure of earlier workers. He accurately diagnosed the weaknesses of their experimental materials, techniques and approaches and he carefully avoided in his own experiments. Identification of contrasting characters: Mendel selected varieties that had clearly different forms of one or more characters, e.g., smooth or wrinkled seeds, grey or white seed coat colour, yellow or c) d) e) f) green cotyledons, etc. (Fig. 13). The two distinct forms of a character, e.g. smooth and wrinkled seeds, are termed as contrasting characters. The difference between the two forms of a pair of contrasting characters was so clear-cut that the individuals of a population could be easily and accurately classified as having one or the other contrasting form. Study of unit character: At first, Mendel studied the inheritance of only one pair of contrasting characters at a time. He took advantage of these contrasting traits to determine how the characters of pea plants are inherited. His focus on these singular differences between pea strains allowed him to study the inheritance of one trait at a time, for example, plant height (Fig. 14). Other biologists, had attempted to follow the inheritance of many traits simultaneously; but because the results of such experiments were complex, they were unable to discover any fundamental principle about heredity. True breeder: The exclusive use of pure lines ensured the predictable outcomes by preventing masked traits in the parents. Maintenance of pedegree records: Mendel kept careful records of the experiments for every generation, which allowed him to determine the ratios. Introduction of mathematics: Mendel’s knowledge of mathematics was instrumental in the interpretation of his findings. As a result, he was able to accept that ratios ranging from 2.82:1 to 3.15:1 were all estimates of 3:1, and not separate ratios. g) h) Large number of progeny per experiment: This gave Mendel the strength of numbers that enabled him to make a statistically significant conclusion. Used an experimental approach: Mendel was able to devise appropriate hypothesis on the basis of the explanation he offered for his experimental findings. Further, he tested these hypotheses experimentally to prove the correctness of his explanations. In spite of the brilliance of experimental approach and procedure, unquestioned genius in analysis and interpretation of data, and the greatest care in the selection of material and carrying out of experiments, Mendel was, undoubtedly, lucky because of the following facts: i) The seven characters selected by Mendel showed qualitative inheritance, and not a single one was inherited quantitatively. ii) The contrasting form of each of the seven characters was governed by a single gene, and in each case one form was completely dominant over the other. iii) Based on the genetic maps of pea chromosome, two of the characters out of the seven characters studied by Mendel have genes on chromosomes 5 and 7 i.e. they are located on non-homologous chromosomes. The genes for other two characters are located on chromosome 1and the genes for remaining three characters are present on chromosome 4. Out of these only two genes, alleles of which determine pod shape and stem height, were close enough to distort the normal dihybrid ratio. Luckily, Mendel did not investigate these characters. Had he done so, he would have run into the confusing phenomenon of linkage. D. Reasons for the neglect of mendel’s findings A number of reasons were responsible for the neglect of the findings of Mendel: a) Mendel used mathematical principles of probability and distribution (binomial) to explain a biological phenomenon. This was something new and not readily acceptable to biologists, since they believed that biological phenomena are too complex to be reduced to a mathematical treatment. b) Mendel’s result did not match those of other scientists who also used plants to try studying heredity. c) Most scientists of Mendel’s time focused on things they could actually see in their research. They wanted to know exactly what Mendel’s “factor” was? What did they look like? Where they were located? No one, not even Mendel, could answer these questions. d) Mendel failed to demonstrate the validity of his conclusions in other species. He was distinctly unlucky in selecting Hieraceum (a facultative apomict) and honey bees (having haploid males) as experimental materials. As a result, he failed to verify his conclusions from pea in these organisms. e) Mendel corresponded extensively with his contemporary, the noted botanist, Carl Nägeli. Mendel informed Nägeli about his failure to verify his conclusions in Hieraceum and other plants. This may have created a doubt about the applicability of Mendel’s conclusions to plants other than pea. E. Highlights of the mendel’s paper Mendel’s paper that launch the science of Genetics had the title “Versuche über Pflanzenhybriden” which translates from the German as “Experiments with PlantHybrids”. This paper was remarkable for its precision and clarity. The main highlights of the paper are summarized below: i) Mendel concluded a complete fusion of male and female gametes, and equal contribution of the two parents to the development of characters of the hybrid (F1). ii) He postulated the existence of factors, now known as genes, which are responsible for the development of various characters. iii) He clearly stated that genes were particulate. iv) He made a clear distinction between the appearance (phenotype) and the genetic makeup (genotype) (Fig. 15). He classified F2 individuals with the dominant phenotype into pure and hybrid forms on the basis of the character forms present in the F3 progenies produced by them. v) He gave the formulae for determining the numbers of: a) Different types of gametes (F1), b) Different genotypes, c) Homozygous genotypes, and d) Individuals in the perfect F2 for segregation of n number of genes. vi) He elaborated the effect of continued selfing on homozygosity for a single allelic pair (a gene with two alleles). Incidentally, this is the same as the homozygosity for any number of allelic pairs. vii) Mendel introduced the concept of dominance and recesiveness and also gave these terms (actually their German equivalents) viii) Mendel elucidated the laws of segregation and independent assortment. ix) He confirmed his own findings in pea with those in rajma. He studied the inheritance of pod colour (green dominant over yellow), pod shape (inflated pods dominant over constricted) and plant height (tall dominant over dwarf) in rajma. x) He studied the inheritance of flowering time (and peduncle length) in rajma, and noted the intermediate appearance of F1 and the effect of environmental factors on flowering time. He concluded that these characters also were inherited according to the same laws of segregation and independent assortment. xi) Mendel noted the appearance of many new, nonparental flower colours in rajma. He suggested that colour in rajma may be a complex character, i.e., governed by several genes inherited according to the same laws of inheritance. xii) He concluded that a larger number of progeny would increase the precision of observations. He also realized that the ratios obtained from biological studies cannot be expected to be as accurate as those in the case of mathematical calculations. xiii) Mendel stated that his explanations were based on two important assumptions: a) equal proportion of different gametes produced and by F1, b) equal chance for each gamete thus produced to effect fertilization. He presented experimental evidence through test cross data to show that the different gametes produced by the F1 were in equal frequency. xiv) He studied the F2 from an interspecific hybrid Phaseolus and obtained deviation from the 3:1 ratio. He explained this to be mainly due to high sterility of the F1 hybrid and the small number of progeny in F2. He suggested that the inheritance in such crosses also followed the same laws. xv) He also attempted to explain the permanent hybrids of some plant species, e.g., Hieraceum, reported by Gaertner. Unfortunately, Mendel had no way to know that these species are apomictic, and present a peculiar pattern of inheritance. From the above discussion it can be concluded that without knowing about chromosomes or the details of cell division, he had found the basic laws of Genetics. The laws Mendel deduced seem common-sense now, but were radically new in his days: 1. Law of paired factors (Genes): For the expression of any trait, a pair of factor is required, later this factor was termed as allelomorph by Bateson and Gene by Johnson. 2. Law of dominance: The law states that in a cross of parents that are pure for contrasting traits, only one form of the trait will appear in the next generation. The trait which expresses itself in the next generation is called as dominant trait, while the trait which remains unexpressed or hidden is called recessive. 3. Law of segregation: The law states that for any particular trait, the pair of alleles separate during gamete formation and only one allele passes from each parent on to an offspring. 4. Law of independent assortment: Factors for different traits behave independently. No two characters need be always together. Different combinations of characters could be brought about. The yellowness is not associated with roundness and greenness with wrinkledness. F. Reasons for failure of Mendel’s predecessors In his 1865 paper, Mendel presented a brilliant analysis of the deficiencies in the experimental approaches of his predecessors. These are summarized below. a) The scientists studied the plant as a whole, i.e., its total appearance consisting of a large number of characters. Therefore, the plants could not be classified into few clear cut classes. These workers did not attempt an exhaustive classification of the different forms of the characteristics present in the progeny. b) The scientists were more concerned with the description of various forms appearing in the progeny. An attempt to determine the frequencies of different characteristic forms in the progeny was not made. c) In many cases, the data from different generations were not kept accurately and separately. d) In many cases, a complete control on pollination in the F1 was lacking. e) In many studies, the F1 was an interspecific hybrid exhibiting partial to considerable sterility. f) The number of plants studied in F2 was relatively small. g) In addition, most of the characters studied by the earlier workers were quantitative in nature. Mendel’s Principle of Dominance Mendel’s Law of Dominance - The second law of Mendel (first law being Law of Unit Characters) states that “in a cross of parents that are pure for contrasting traits, only one form of the trait will appear in the next generation”. Offspring that are hybrid for a trait will have only the dominant trait in the phenotype. While Mendel was crossing (reproducing) his pea plants (over and over again), he noticed something interesting. When he crossed pure tall plants with pure short plants, all the new pea plants (referred to as the F1 generation) were tall (Fig. 16). Similarly, crossing pure yellow seeded pea plants and pure green seeded pea plants produced an F1 generation of all yellow seeded pea plants (Fig.17). The same was true for other pea traits (Table 2). So, what he noticed was that when the parent plants had contrasting forms of a trait (tall vs short, green vs yellow, etc.) the phenotypes of the offspring resembled only one of the parent plants with respect to that trait. So, Mendel proposed a law in which he proposed that there is a factor that makes pea plants tall, and another factor that makes pea plants short. Furthermore, when the factors were mixed, the tall factor seemed to dominate over the short factor. Table 2: Results of Mendel’s monohybrid cross. Parental strains F1 F2 progeny Ratio progeny Tall plants x Short Tall plants plants Round seeds x Round wrinkled seeds seeds Yellow seeds x green Yellow seeds seeds Purple flowers x Purple white flowers flowers Inflated pods x Inflated constricted pods pods Green pods x Yellow Green pods pods Axial flowers x Axial terminal flowers flowers 787 tall, 277 dwarf 5474 round, 1850 wrinkled 6022 yellow, 2001 green 705 purple, 224 white 882 inflated, 299 constricted 428 green, 152 yellow 651 axial, 207 terminal 2.84 :1 2.96 :1 3.01 :1 3.15 :1 2.95 :1 2.82 :1 3.14 :1 Now, from our modern wisdom, we use allele or gene instead of what Mendel called factors (Fig. 18). There is a gene in the DNA of pea plants that controls plant height (makes them either tall or short). One form of the gene (allele) codes for tall, and the other allele for plant height codes for short. For abbreviations, we use the capital “T” for the dominant tall allele, and the lowercase “t” for the recessive short allele. A. Mechanism of monohybrid cross A cross in which only a single pair of alleles is considered is called a monohybrid cross. Fig. 19 is a mathematical representation of the cross between tall and dwarf peas in terms of Mendel’s interpretation. In this T is the symbol which stands for the factor or gene controlling tallness, and t is the symbol used to denote the factor or gene controlling dwarfness. The factors or genes, as postulated by Mendel, always occur in pairs. Both tall and the dwarf plants which are crossed are homozygous (i.e., both the genes in a pair are identical). These plants are “pure” for tallness and dwarfness, respectively, and if self-pollinated will always breed true, producing only tall and dwarf plants, respectively. In the present monohybrid cross, the tall parent, which is homozygous, is shown as TT, and the dwarf parent shown as tt. During the course of sexual reproduction both kinds of plants produce gametes; these gametes contain but one factor of each pair (i.e., either T or t). The gametes produced by the tall plant contain T gene (Fig. 20), while the gametes of dwarf plant possess t gene (Fig. 21). The fusion of a gamete from the tall plant with a gamete from the dwarf plant produces a tall plant in F1 generation, because the gene for tallness (T) is dominant over the dwarfness (t). The new plant in the F1 generation is shown in the Fig. 19 as Tt. It is a heterozygous plant because it possesses a pair of homologous chromosomes carrying one allele for tallness and one for shortness (Fig. 22). The heterozygous plants produce two kinds of gametes or sex cells, male gamete and female gamete. Half of the male gametes contain T gene and the other half t gene. Similarly half of the female gametes possess T gene and the other half t gene. During the process of fertilization, these two kinds of gametes i.e., male and female, unite at random and produce F2 generation. As a result of these chance combinations, an approximate phenotypic ratio of 3 tall plants to 1 dwarf plant (i.e., 3:1 ratio) is normally obtained (Fig. 23). All plants with TT and Tt genes will be tall, and the plants possessing tt (both recessive) genes will be dwarf. Mendel further noted that the results from reciprocal crosses were identical. Since garden peas are sexual plants, each cross can be performed in two ways. The two crosses in which the same two parents are involved but the strain which serves as the male parent in one cross is used as the female parent in the other, and viceversa, is called reciprocal cross (Fig. 24). B. Certain other examples of Law of Dominance After Mendel several Geneticists tested the validity of the law of dominance in several plants and animals. They found its wide application. a. Law of Dominance in Plants: Besides pea plant, the law of dominance has also been observed in various other plants (Table 3). Table 3: The dominant and recessive characters in plants. Name of Dominant Recessive the plant character state character state Nettle Serrated leaves Smooth margined leaves Sunflower Branched habit Un-branched habit Cotton Coloured lint White lint Maize Round starchy Wrinkle, sugary kernel kernel Snapdragon Red flower Non-red flower Barely Beardlessness Beardness Wheat Susceptibility Immunity to rust Tomato Two-celled fruit Many-celled fruit b. Law of Dominance in animals: The law of dominance is applicable well to the animals. For instance, when a homozygous black guinea pig is crossed with a homozygous brown guinea pig (Fig. 25), all hybrids of F1 are found to be black. The black hybrids of F1 when mated among themselves they produce black and brown offsprings in 3:1 ratio. This shows that black coat colour dominates over brown coat colour. The dominant and recessive character states of some other animals are tabulated in Table 4. Table: 4: The dominant and recessive characters in animals. Name of animal Cat Dog Cattle Horse Sheep Fruit Fly Salamander Land snail Body character Skin colour Length of Hair Skin colour Tall Colour of face Horn Skin colour Movement Wool Eye colour Wings Body colour Shape of shell Dominant state Tabby Short hairs Recessive state Black or blue Long hairs Grey Stumpy White Black Normal tall Coloured Polled Black Trotting White Red Flat & yellow Dark Unbanded shell Horned Red Pacing Black White Curled & white Light Banded shell c. Dominant and recessive character states in humans: The rules of inheritance discovered by Mendel are applicable to humans also. Consider the inherited disease of humans, Cystic Fibrosis. This is the most common lethal genetic disease afflicting Caucasians. It is caused by a mutant recessive gene carried by one in 20 people of European descent (over 12 million people in the United States alone). This means that one in 400 Caucasian couples will both be carriers and, as can be expected by the monohybrid inheritance pattern, one in four of their children will have the disease. If two parents who are carriers of the recessive gene Cfcf, (heterozygous) produce offspring, as can be seen in the Punnett square (Fig. 26), one in four of their children will be homozygous and have cystic fibrosis. Of course, it should be noted that this one in four probability is just an expectation, and that in fact two carriers could produce any number of perfectly normal children. However, the greatest probability is for one in four children to be affected. Presently one out of every 29 Americans is a symptom-less carrier of the gene. B. Phenotype and genotype The term phenotype refers to the external appearance of the organism; the term genotype refers to the internal, genetic make-up of the individual. The concepts of phenotype and genotype were clearly stated by Mendel, but the terms themselves were introduced much later. A tall plant may be either homozygous (TT) or heterozygous (Tt) genotypically, but in either state it will have the same phenotype (appearance) i.e., tall (Fig 15). Thus the genotype of individuals with the dominant character cannot be known from their phenotype; it can be known only after studying their progeny (either from selfing or from a test cross). On the otherhand, dwarf plants can only have the genotype tt. Therefore, the genotype of individuals possessing a recessive trait can be inferred from their phenotypes themselves. The relationship between the genotype and phenotype is a simple one. The genotype carried by all living organisms, holds the critical instructions that are used and interpreted by the cellular machinery of the cells to produce phenotype of the organism. Thus, all the physical parts, the molecules, macromolecules, cells and other structures, are built and maintained by cells following the instructions give by the genotype. As these physical structures begin to act and interact with one another they can produce larger and more complex phenomena such as metabolism, energy utilization, tissues, organs, reflexes and behaviors; anything that is part of the observable structure, function or behavior of a living organism. Mendel’s principle of segregation The 3:1 ratio can be explained with reference to Fig. 27. This is the heart of Mendelian genetics. The figure illustrates the following key features of single-gene inheritance: a. Genes come in pairs, which mean that a cell or individual has two copies (alleles) of each gene. b. For each pair of genes, the alleles may be identical (homozygous TT or homozygous tt), or they may be different (heterozygous Tt). c. Each reproductive cell (gamete) produced by an individual contains only one allele of each gene (that is, either T or t) d. In the formation of gametes, any particular gamete is equally likely to include either allele (hence, from a heterozygous Tt genotype, half the gametes contain T and the other half contains t). e. The union of male and female reproductive cells is a random process that reunites the alleles in pairs. The essential feature of transmission genetics is the separation, technically called segregation, in unaltered form, of the two alleles in an individual during the formation of its reproductive cells. The principle of segregation is sometimes called Mandel’s first law (because law of unit characters and law of dominance do not hold true in all cases). The principle of segregation is, as a matter of fact, the later half of the law of dominance. It states that “alleles will separate from each other during the production of gametes so that they are equally transmitted to the progeny”. This principle is often referred to as the principle of “purity of gametes”, because gametes have only one gene of each pair. A. Assumptions involved in segregation as an explanation for the 3:1 ratio The explanation of 3:1 ratio according to the law of segregation is based on the following assumptions: a) The production of two types of gametes in equal frequencies in F1, b) Equal survival or function of the different gametes, c) Random union of male and female gametes, and d) Equal survival of different zygotes thus produced. Mendel himself was aware of the first and the third assumptions, and he devised the test cross to test the equal frequency of the gametes from F1. A failure of the second and fourth assumptions may occur in some cases, which may lead to significant deviations from the typical 3:1 ratio. Fortunately, the failure of these two assumptions is not common, and it didn’t occur in the cases studied by Mendel. The evidence for equal frequency of the two types of gametes produced by segregation of a single gene is both indirect as well as direct. Indirect evidence is based on the frequencies of different types of zygotes produced in a test cross. The direct evidence, on the other hand, derives from a direct classification of gametes and scoring the frequencies of the two classes. B. Certain other examples of law of segregation The law of segregation is universal in its application, and it has been found to occur in both plants and animals. The examples which are cited above in the law of dominance can also be considered for the law of segregation. However, to understand the mechanism of segregation more clearly in animals, it will be helpful to consider an original experiment of T.H. Morgan on Drosophila. Morgan crossed a homozygous long winged (wildtype) Drosophila with a homozygous vestigial winged Drosophila (Fig. 28). The F1 heterozygote or hybrids were found to be long winged. When the F1 hybrids were allowed to mate among themselves, they produced longwinged and vestigial hybrids in 3:1 ratio in the F2 generation. In this cross, the mechanism of segregation can be well understood by assuming that homozygous longwinged Drosophila has a pair of alleles LL for longness of wing and, similarly, homozygous vestigial-winged Drosophila has the alleles ll for vestigial nature of wings. The long-winged Drosophila thus produces the gametes with the single allele L and the vestigial-winged fly produces the gametes with the single allele l. The gametes of both parents unite in the process of fertilization and produce a hybrid with long wings in the F1 generation. The genotype of the F1 hybrid is Ll, and in which allele L is dominant over the l, which is recessive. At the time of gametogenesis, these alleles (L and l) are separated along with chromosomes to form two types of gametes, half of the gametes having the allele L and the other half the allele l. These gametes unite in three possible combinations, viz. LL, Ll and ll, to produce genotypically three types of individuals LL, Ll and ll in 1:2:1 ratio in F2 generation. Phenotypically there occur three long-winged and one vestigial-winged Drosophila. Thus the dominant and recessive alleles remain together for long time without contaminating or mixing with one another, and segregate during gametogenesis. C. Physical basis of segregation The phenomenon of segregation can be easily explained on the basis of behaviour of homologous chromosomes during meiosis. As a consequence of segregation, the two alleles of gene separate and go into different gametes. Similarly, the two members of the homologous chromosome pair separate at anaphase-I of meiosis and move to the opposite poles of a cell. In F1 hybrid or a heterozygote, one of the two alleles of a gene is located in one chromosome, while the other allele is present in the homologue of this chromosome. The two homologous chromosomes pair during prophaseI and orient at the metaphase plate during metaphase-I. At anaphase-I, one of the two homologous chromosomes moves to one pole, while the other chromosome of the pair moves to the opposite pole. Thus, each pole receives only one member of a homologous pair of chromosomes. As a result, one of the two alleles goes to one pole, and the other allele goes to the opposite pole Fig. 29. At anaphase-II, the two sister chromatids of each chromosome separate and move to the opposite poles, producing four daughter cells, each having a single chromatid from each homologous pair of chromosomes. Two of these four cells receive the sister chromatids from one of the two homologues, while the other two receive the sister chromatid from the other homologue. As a result, two of the four cells receive the dominant allele, while in the remaining two cells the recessive allele of the allelic pair is present (Fig. 29). Thus, the separation of homologous chromosomes during meiosis may be regarded as the reason for the segregation of the two alleles of a gene, since the alleles are located in identical positions in the homologous chromosomes. As far as the time of segregation is concerned, two situations may arise: a. When there is no crossing over between a gene and the centromere of the chromosome carrying this gene (Fig. 29), the alleles of the gene segregate during the first meiotic division, which is the reductional division in such cases. b. But, when there is a crossing over between the gene and centromere (Fig. 30), the two alleles of the gene segregate during second meiotic division, which is the reductional division in such cases. D. Verification of principle of segregation- Test cross and back cross The tall plants in Fig. 15 conceal a genotypic ratio of 1TT : 2Tt. To say the same thing in another way, among the F2 plants that are tall (or, more generally, among organisms that show the dominant morphological phenotype), 1/3 are homozygous (in this example, TT) and 2/3 are heterozygous (in this example, Tt). Unless you know something about Genetics it would be a very bold hypothesis, because it applies that two organisms with the same morphological phenotype (in this case, tall plants) might nevertheless differ in molecular phenotype and in genotype. Yet this is what Mendel exactly proposed. But how could this hypothesis be tested experimentally? He realized that it could be tested via self-fertilization of the F2 plants. With self fertilization, plants grown from the homozygous TT genotypes should yield tall and dwarf plants in the ratio of 3:1. On the other hand, the plants grown from seeds of dwarf plants should be truebreeding for dwarfness, because these plants are homozygous tt. An important feature of the homozygous tall and dwarf plants produced in the F2 and F3 generations is that the phenotypes are exactly the same as those observed in the original parents in the P generation. This makes sense in terms of DNA, because the DNA of each allele remains unaltered unless a new mutation happens to occur. Mendel described this result in a letter by saying that in the progeny of crosses “the two parental traits appear, separated and unchanged, and there is nothing to indicate that one of them has either inherited or taken over anything from the other”. From this finding, he concluded that the heredity determinants for the traits in the parental lines were transmitted as two diferrent elements that retain their purity in the hybrids. In other words, the heredity determinants do not “mix” or “contaminate” each other. In modern terminology, this means that, with rare but important exceptions, genes are transmitted unchanged from generation to generation. Another straightforward way of testing the genetic hypothesis in Fig. 27, is by means of a test cross, a cross between an organism that is heterozygous for one or more genes (for example, Tt) and an organism that is homozygous for the recessive allele (for example tt). The result of such a testcross is shown in Fig. 31. Because the heterozygous parent is expected to produce T and t gametes in equal numbers, and the homozygous recessive produces only t gametes, the expected progeny are ½ with the genotype Tt and ½ with the genotype tt. The former have the dominant phenotype. Mendel carried out a series of test crosses with various characters. The results are shown in Table 4. In all cases, the ratio of phenotypes among the test cross progeny is very close to 1:1, as expected from segregation of the alleles in the heterozygous parent. Table 4: Mendel’s test cross results. Test Cross Progeny from Ratio (F1 heterozygote homozygous recessive) Tall x dwarf plants x test cross 87 tall, 79 dwarf 1.10 1 Round x wrinkled seeds 193 round, 192 1.01 wrinkled 1 Yellow x green seeds 196 yellow, 189 green 1.04 1 Purple x white flowers 85 purple, 81 white 1.05 1 : : : : Another valuable type of cross is a back cross, in which hybrid organisms are crossed with one of the parental genotypes. Back crosses are commonly used by genetists and by plant and animal breeders.