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DNA, Genes and inheritance I got it from my mama! • • • DNA is a double helix discovered by Watson and Crick in 1953 they won a Nobel prize for their work The structure of DNA uncoiled diagram diagram spacefilling model The structure of DNA S S P P G C S P S T P A S S P P The base pairs Hydrogen bond Guanine G Thymine T Cytosine C Adenine A Chargaff’s Rule Adenine must pair with Thymine Guanine must pair with Cytosine because they always pair together, their amounts in a DNA molecule are the same T A G C Question: • If there is 30% Adenine in a strand of DNA, how much Cytosine is present? Answer: there would be 20% Cytosine: Adenine (30%) = Thymine (30%) Guanine (20%) = Cytosine (20%) (50%) = (50%) Genes • DNA is not a sequence of random information, it is broken up into areas with different functions • sections of DNA with particular functions are called genes These are all genes! start of human chromosome 1 Alleles • different versions of the same gene are called alleles • e.g. the gene for eye pigment in fruit flies (Drosophila) has a red allele, a white allele, and a brown allele • chromosomes are always paired, so it is possible to have two different alleles for any given gene eye colour alleles in Drosophila Ishihara Colour Blindness Test everyone sees 12 normal = 8 red-green = 3 total = nothing normal = 74 red-green = 21 total = nothing normal = 6 red-green = nothing total = nothing Gregor Mendel: father of genetics • discovered heredity – the passing on of characteristics from parent to offspring • bred pea plants until they were true-breeding, the offspring always resembled the parents Mendel’s experiment • he took one plant of each type, such as purple and white flowers, and bred them together: all the offspring were purple • took two of these offspring and bred them to make a second generation: 3 purple offspring / 1 white offspring Parental generation cross-fertilise true-breeding purple flowers First generation (F1) all offspring purple true-breeding white flowers First generation (F1) Second generation (F2) all offspring purple self-fertilize 3/4 purple 1/4 white Mendel’s Conclusions 1.parents pass on ‘elements’ to their offspring; these ‘elements’ remain unchanged during life 2.offspring receive one ‘element’ from each parent; therefore offspring have a pair 3.each parent can pass on a different version of the ‘element’ Mendel’s ‘elements’ are now called GENES. Number of genes Carsonella ruddii (bacterium) 180 Streptococcus pneumoniae (bacterium) 2,300 Escherichia coli (bacterium) 4,400 Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) 5,800 Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly) 13,700 Caenorhabditis elegans (nematode) 19,000 Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (urchin) 23,300 Homo sapiens (human) 27,000 Mus musculus (mouse) 29,000 Oryza sativa (rice) 50,000 Dominant vs. recessive dominant = when one allele overwrites the expression of another allele recessive = when one allele is masked by the expression of another allele the dominant allele is given a capital letter (P), the recessive allele a lower case letter (p) Dominant and recessive traits in peas Human dominant/recessive Cleft in chin No cleft dominant, cleft recessive traits: Hairline Widow peak dominant, straight hairline recessive Eyebrow size Broad dominant, slender recessive Eyebrow shape Separated dominant, joined recessive Eyelash length Long dominant, short recessive Dimples Dimples dominant, no dimples recessive Earlobes Free lobe dominant, attached recessive Freckles Freckles dominant, no freckles recessive Tongue rolling Roller dominant, nonroller recessive Tongue folding Inability dominant, ability recessive Finger mid-digital hair Hair dominant, no hair recessive Bent little finger Bent dominant, straight recessive Interlaced fingers Left thumb over right dominant, right over left recessive Hair on back of hand Hair dominant, no hair recessive Heterozygous vs. homozygous Heterozygous = having two different alleles for a particular gene (e.g. Pp) Homozygous = having two of the same allele for a particular gene (e.g. PP or pp) Genotype vs. phenotype genotype = the genetic characteristics of an organism eg. PP or Pp phenotype = the visible physical features of an organism e.g. white flower Phenotype Genotype purple flower PP or Pp white flower pp The Punnett Square In three steps, it’s an easy way to determine the probability of offspring: Step 1: Make a 2 X 2 Square grid Step 2: Put the alleles of each parent on the outside of the square Step 3: Combine alleles to make potential offspring in the middle of the square Sample Punnett problem • The gene for free ear-lobes is dominant (E), and the gene for attached earlobes is recessive (e). If a heterozygous male mates with a homozygous recessive female, what is the probability that their child will have attached earlobes? Solution: Female Male E e e Ee ee e Ee ee • 50% chance heterozygous (Ee – free lobes) • 50% homozygous recessive (ee – attached lobes) Types of Evolution and Genetic Change 1. Divergent Evolution When a population of a species become different enough in their genotype and phenotype to be considered a separate species Factors that lead to Divergent Evolution Can happen by: Genetic drift (population changes due to migration or adaptation Reproductive isolation (isolation—ie cut off lake from another, mountain ranges) 2. Convergent Evolution When two species develop similar characteristics based on environmental conditions. Organisms are not directly evolutionarily related