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Observing Patterns in Inherited Traits Chapter 11 Updated Reading 11.1-11.3 Not 11.5-11.7 What you absolutely need to know • Punnett Square with monohybrid and dihybrid cross • Heterozygous, homozygous, alleles, locus, gene • Test cross, P, F1, F2 • Mendel and his work Early Ideas about Heredity • People knew that sperm and eggs transmitted information about traits • Blending theory • Problem: – Would expect variation to disappear – Variation in traits persists No Blending Involved • We cannot say that a red flower crossed with a what flower produces a pink flower. Name this man Gregor Mendel • Strong background in plant breeding and mathematics • Using pea plants, found indirect but observable evidence of how parents transmit genes to offspring Genetic Terms A pair of homologous chromosomes A gene locus A pair of alleles Three pairs of genes The Garden Pea Plant • Self-pollinating • True breeding (different alleles not normally introduced) • Can be experimentally crosspollinated Impact of Mendel’s Work • Mendel presented his results in 1865 • Paper received little notice • Mendel discontinued his experiments in 1871 • Paper rediscovered in 1900 and finally appreciated Genes • Units of information about specific traits • Passed from parents to offspring • Each has a specific location (locus) on a chromosome Alleles • Different molecular forms of a gene • Arise by mutation • Dominant allele masks a recessive allele that is paired with it Allele Combinations • Homozygous – having two identical alleles at a locus – AA or aa • Heterozygous – having two different alleles at a locus – Aa Genotype & Phenotype • Genotype refers to particular genes an individual carries • Phenotype refers to an individual’s observable traits • Cannot always determine genotype by observing phenotype. Ex. A blond haired person can produce a red-haired offspring Tracking Generations • Parental generation mates to produce P • First-generation offspring mate to produce F1 • Second-generation offspring F2 Monohybrid Crosses • Use F1 offspring of parents that breed true for different forms of a trait: (AA x aa = Aa) • The experiment itself is a cross between two identical F1 heterozygotes, which are the “monohybrids” (Aa x Aa) F1 Results of One Monohybrid Cross Punnett Square of a Monohybrid Cross Female gametes A Male gametes A AA a Aa a Aa aa Dominant phenotype can arise 3 ways, recessive only 1 F2 Results of Monohybrid Cross Testcross • Individual that shows dominant phenotype is crossed with individual with recessive phenotype (AA x aa) • Examining offspring allows you to determine the genotype of the dominant individual Dominance Relations • Complete dominance • Incomplete dominance – Heterozygote phenotype is somewhere between that of two homozyotes • Codominance – Non-identical alleles specify two phenotypes that are both expressed in heterozygotes F1 Results of Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses • All plants displayed the dominant form of both traits: AaBb • We now know: – All plants inherited one allele for each trait from each parent – All plants were heterozygous (AaBb) F1 Results of Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses • All plants displayed the dominant form of both traits: AaBb • We now know: – All plants inherited one allele for each trait from each parent – All plants were heterozygous (AaBb) Dihybrid Cross Experimental cross between individuals that are homozygous for different versions of two traits • • • • • Now we want to try two traits Purple AA Tall BB Parent with purple flowers and and long stems = AABB Purple AA Tall BB Parent with white flowers and short stems White aa and short stems bb Dihybrid cross is AABB x aabb Phenotypic Ratios in F2 AaBb X AaBb Four Phenotypes: – Tall, purple-flowered (9/16) – Tall, white-flowered (3/16) – Dwarf, purple-flowered (3/16) – Dwarf, white-flowered (1/16) AaBb x AaBb produces the following gametes If the two traits are coded for by genes on separate chromosome s, sixteen gamete combinations are possible