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Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: Blog resource: http://tinyurl.com/26unw7c Click4Biology: http://tinyurl.com/62qztrs Highlight all objective 1 command terms in yellow Highlight all objective 2 and 3 command terms in green – these will be part of the discussions in class. 1. Define the following: Genotype Gene expression Phenotype Dominant allele Recessive allele Codominant alleles Homozygous Heterozygous Carrier Mixed phenotype Autosome Sex chromosome Gene locus Monohybrid cross Test cross 2. Outline the conventions for notation of genotypes, using one example of each: Dominant/recessive alleles Codominant alleles Sex-linked traits 1. The allele for tall plants is dominant over the allele for dwarf plants. a. State the possible genotypes of a tall plant. b. Explain how a test cross could be used to determine the genotype of a tall plant. 3. Mendel is known as the father of genetics for his extensive experimental work with peas and different types of crosses. Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: a. Complete the punnet grid below to show the outcome of the monohybrid cross that results in peas of different colours. b. Complete the punnet grid below to show the possible outcomes of a cross between two members of the F1 generation. Describe all genotypes produced. 4. Human ABO blood types follow a codominant inheritance pattern. a. Describe what is meant by “some genes have multiple alleles.” Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: b. Complete the table below to show how blood type is inherited. alleles i IA IB i IA IB c. Highlight the genotype and phenotype which is an example of codominance. 5. Complete this pedigree chart to show the inheritance of blood types in this family. Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: 6. Sickle cell is another example of codominance. a. State the genotypes and phenotypes of these individuals. HbAHbA HbAHbs HbsHbs genotype phenotype b. Predict the phenotype ratios of offspring in the following crosses. Show all your working, and set it out as expected. Take care with notation. i. Carrier mother with affected father ii. Affected father with unaffected mother. iii. Carrier mother with carrier father. c. Explain how the prevalence of sickle cell in regions of Africa is an example of natural selection in action. A B C D E d. The pedigree chart below shows a family affected by sickle cell: i. Deduce the genotype of each individual with a letter. F G H $ # Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: ii. Calculate the likelihood of any further children produced by E and her # having sickle cell anemia. iii. Male $ is healthy but of unknown genotype. Calculate the likelihood of any children produced with female D having sickle cell anemia. Show all working. 7. Some traits are autosomal whereas others are carried on sex chromosomes. a. Distinguish between autosomes and sex chromosomes. b. Annotate the diagram to distinguish between the X and Y chromosomes. c. Outline the role of the SRY gene on the Y chromosome. d. Outline how non-disjunction can lead to gender-related chromosome abnormalities. Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: 8. Some inherited disorders are associated with gender. a. Define sex-linkage. b. State two examples of sex-linked genetic disorders. c. Explain why sex-linked disorders are more common in males than females. d. Explain why human females can be homozygous or heterozygous for sex-linked genes, where males cannot. e. The allele for colour blindness (n) is recessive to the allele for normal vision (N). This gene is carried in a non-homologous region on the X chromosome. Complete the table below to show the genotypes and phenotypes of individuals with regard to colour blindness. Female Male XN XN Normal Affected Not possible! Why? Carrier f. In the space below, complete a punnet grid to show a cross between a normal male and a carrier female. What is the expected ratio of phenotypes? Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: 9. Hemophilia is a blood-clotting disorder that is also recessive and sex-linked. a. State the normal function of the gene associated with hemophilia. b. Describe the effects and symptoms of hemophilia. c. Use the pedigree chart to deduce the possible genotype(s) of the named individuals. Leopold Helen Alice Mary Rubert Bob Britney d. Outline one form of genetic engineering used to help patients with hemophilia. e. Suggest reasons why the frequency of some disease-related alleles might be increasing in the population. Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: Works Cited 1. Allott, Andrew. IB Study Guide: Biology for the IB Diploma. s.l. : Oxford University Press, 2007. 978-019-915143-1. 2. Mindorff, D and Allott, A. Biology Course Companion. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2007. 978099151240. 3. Clegg, CJ. Biology for the IB Diploma. London : Hodder Murray, 2007. 978-0340926529. 4. Campbell N., Reece J., Taylor M., Simon. E. Biology Concepts and Connections. San Fransisco : Pearson Benjamin Cummings, 2006. 0-8053-7160-5. 5. Taylor, Stephen. Science Video Resources. [Online] Wordpress, 2010. http://sciencevideos.wordpress.com. 6. Burrell, John. Click4Biology. [Online] 2010. http://click4biology.info/. 7. IBO. Biology Subject Guide. [Online] 2007. http://xmltwo.ibo.org/publications/migrated/productionapp2.ibo.org/publication/7/part/2/chapter/1.html. SL REVISION NOTES ON THEORETICAL GENETICS Two major findings of Mendel: Law of Segregation: each organism contains two alleles for each trait, and the alleles segregate during the formation of gametes. Each gamete then contains only one allele for each trait. When fertilization occurs, the new organism has two alleles for each trait, one from each parent. Traits retain their individuality—not blended. Law of Independent Assortment: members of an allelic pair segregate independently from members of another allelic pair. Alleles: alternative forms of a gene Dominant: an allele that expresses itself and masks the effects of the allele(s) for the trait. recessive: an allele that does not express itself in the phenotype when it is matched with a dominant allele. Genotype refers to an individual’s alleles for a gene Phenotype refers to an individual’s appearance homozygous: two identical alleles for a trait homozygous dominant—having two dominant alleles:AA homozygous recessive—having two recessive alleles: aa heterozygous—having one dominant and one recessive allele, Aa Monohybrid Cross: genetic cross that tracks the inheritance of a single character Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: Law of Segregation: Mendel found that reproduction between two heterozygous monohybrid individuals (Aa) resulted in both dominant and recessive phenotypes among offspring, even though both parents’ phenotypes expressed the dominant phenotype. The phenotypic ratio among the offspring was 3:1. Three offspring had the dominant phenotype for every one that had the recessive phenotype. Punnet square: used to determine all possible combinations and their probabilities. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Assign a symbol for each allele (will depend which allele is dominant). Determine the genotype of each parent. Determine the two possible kinds of gametes each parent can make. Determine the gene combinations. Determine the phenotypes of each potential offspring. Calculate the genotypic and phenotypic ratios. Incomplete dominance: when the heterozygous condition is intermediate in phenotype to the two homozygous conditions. (Example: Red snapdragons crossed with white snapdragons produce pink F1’s). Discuss why this is not blending. Codominance: both alleles are expressed by the heterozygote. IA allele codes for an enzyme that puts A carbohydrate on surface of blood cells. IB allele codes for an enzyme that puts B carbohydrate on surface of blood cells. i allele codes for neither carbohydrate (recessive to IA and IB alleles). Multiple alleles (not always just two alleles): Four possible phenotypes for blood groups that are determined by combinations of three different alleles of one gene. HL EXTRA Dihybrid Cross: genetic cross that tracks the inheritance of two characters simultaneously. Law of independent assortment: Mendel found that members of an allelic pair segregate independently from members of another allelic pair. (Use example when two heterozygotes are crossed with each other to demonstrate that alleles from one locus segregate independently from those at a second locus.) Probability can be used to solve complex Mendelian genetics problems. Polygenic Inheritance: when a number of different pairs of alleles at several loci are important for expression of a trait. Such traits are typically quantitative in nature, not qualitative as seen in dominance/recessive relationships. Skin Color (AABBCC = very dark skin; aabbcc = very light skin). Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: Environment: Genetics are not the only factor that affects the phenotype. The environment can have a dramatic effect. For example, pigmentation (freckles or skin color) increases in the presence of sunlight. (Some medications—for malaria—prevent tanning, so chemical environment can also affect genetics.). SOME GOOD GENETICS QUESTIONS Long wing in fruit flies is dominant to short wing. Homozygous long-winged flies were crossed with short-winged flies. The F1 were allowed to mate amongst themselves and then the F2 counted. There were 1149 long-winged flies and 379 short-winged flies. What was the genotype and phenotype of the F1 flies and explain the numbers in the F2. Being aggressive is the dominant characteristic of the Belliger Ant and gentle is the recessive. Two aggressive ants were crossed and in the F1 there were three times more aggressive ants than gentle ants. Explain this. Mendelian Genetics Practice Problems For the problems listed below, you are to solve the type of inheritance: simple dominance, codominance, sex-linked gene, multiple alleles, etc. and explain the rationale of your choice. 1. Mice I o a) cross 1: red-eyed mouse X white-eyed mouse gives F1: all red-eyed Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Due Date: Student Name: cross 2: red-eyed F1 X red-eyed F1 gives F2: 36 red-eyed 13 white-eyed o b) cross 1: long-eared mouse X short-eared mouse gives F1: 12 long-eared 10 short-eared cross 2: long-eared F1 X long-eared F1 gives F2: 36 long-eared 13 short-eared 2. Flowers cross 1: blue-flowered plant X white-flowered plant gives F1: all pale-blue-flowered cross 2: pale-blue F1 X pale-blue F1 gives F2: 27 blue 49 pale-blue 24 white 3. Blood Type o a) cross 1: person, type A blood X person with type B gives F1: all type AB blood cross 2: type AB F1 X type AB F1 gives F2: 2 type A 4 type AB 1 type B o b) cross 1: type A blood X type B gives F1: 2 type A blood 3 type AB blood 1 type B blood 2 type O blood 4. Mice II cross 1: tail-less mouse X normal mouse gives F1: Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Student Name: 10 tail-less 9 normal cross 2: tail-less F1 X tail-less F1 gives F2: 10 normal 21 tail-less 9 dead 5. Flies cross 1: red-eyed female X red-eyed male gives F1: 50 red-eyed female 25 red-eyed male 25 white-eyed male cross 2: white-eyed male F1 X red-eyed female F1 52 crosses give: 30 red male 33 red female 48 crosses give: 22 red male 24 red female 21 white male 23 white female 6. Pedigrees Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Due Date: Essential Biology 4.3 Theoretical Genetics Student Name: You can check your answers on the Solutions Page. Stephen Taylor up to Page 5 Bandung International School Due Date: