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Lesson 4 Heredity Notes Heredity- passing of genetic material from parents to offspring o Gregor Mendel- hypothesized each parent has 2 heritable “factors” for each trait, one from each parent o Characteristic- a feature with different forms (hair color, eye color, flower color, freckles) o Trait- the options for the characteristics Blonde/brown/red/black hair Blue/green/brown eyes Freckles/no freckles Pink/white flowers o Traits are passed from parents to offspring though genes Alleles- different versions of the gene (G- dominant, g- recessive) Heterozygous- trait is one dominant and 1 recessive allele (Gg) Homozygous- trait is two dominant or 2 recessive alleles (GG or gg) o Genes influence traits Genotype- combination of alleles (genes) you inherit (GG, Gg, or gg) Phenotype- observable trait- what it looks like physically- (red hair, brown hair, etc.) Dominant allele contributes to phenotype if 1 or 2 alleles are present(GG, Gg) Recessive allele contributes to phenotype only when 2 alleles are present (gg) Many genes can influence a single trait o Eye color, skin color, hair color are all influenced by several genes Single genes can affect multiple traits o White tiger- white fur and blue eyes- same gene o Sickle cell anemia Environment can affect traits o Can influence phenotype Artic fox- fur turns colors depending on amount of sunlight received Reaching your full height potential can depend on adequate nutrition Wrinkles on skin can increase due to sun exposure Inherited vs. Acquired traits o Inherited from parents from genes- eye color, dimples, freckles, hair color, etc. o Acquired- learned traits- language, accent, ride a bike, play a sport Dominance o Complete dominance One or two alleles will cause dominant trait Recessive trait only shows with 2 recessive alleles o Incomplete dominance A blend Snapdragons- red + white will result in pink offspring Hair- curly + straight will result in wavy o Codominance Neither dominant AB blood type has both A and B antigens at work Lesson 5- Punnett Squares and Pedigrees Punnett squares are used to predict patterns of heredity o Graphic that predicts the possible genotypes from a given cross Parent 1- genotype- Rr Parent 2- genotype- rr o R r r r Rr rr Rr rr To fill in the square place parent 1 genotypes on top of the square- 1 over each column Place parent 2 genotypes to the left of the square- 1 next to each row Bring each letter down Bring each letter over Punnett squares can be used to make predictions o In example above, possible genotypes are Rr, rr, Rr, and rr. o Probability is the mathematical chance of each genotype occurring Ratio- compares 2 quantities- here # of a genotype to possible genotypes Ratio of Rr- 2 chances of 4, or 2:4 (read:2 to 4) Ratio of rr- 2 chances of 4, or 2:4 Percentage compares the number to 100 2:4 would be 50:100, or 50% o Chance of Rr is 50%, chance of rr is 50%. Pedigree is a chart that traces a trait through several generations of a family Can be useful to trace sex-linked disorders (like colorblindness or hemophilia) and other genetic diseases (cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia) o Chart usually has a key to describe males/females, and whether individual has the trait (usually shaded in), carries the trait (usually partially shaded in), or doesn’t carry or have the trait (not shaded at all) Pedigree chart example: (or see p. 142)