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Heredity Patterns of Inheritance Traits and Genes • Genes are locations on chromosomes that control the expression of traits in living things. • Remember that DNA makes RNA and RNA makes Protein. DNA RNA Protein Trait •Protein is what we are. •Traits are the physical expression of protein in living things Gene Loci • Heredity is the study of the transmission of traits from parent to offspring. • Heredity studies traits that can be observed at the organism level. • Traits include things like include facial features that cause generations to resemble each other. Traits and Genes • All organisms have 2 versions of a trait. – They get one of each version from each parent (one from mom and one from dad) • Alternative forms of a traits are controlled by genes that have the same position on a pair of chromosomes and affect the same trait – Two things to remember here (1. You get one chromosome from each parent AND each version of gene on these homologous chromosomes are called alleles. • Alleles occur at the same loci (position) on homologous chromosomes. Gametes Formation I • When organisms reproduce to make an offspring (a baby) they must first reduce their chromosome numbers in half to form gametes – A gamete is a sperm or egg – During gamete formation alleles segregate each gamete has only one factor from each pair. – Gametes are also called sex cells. • Fertilization gives each new individual two factors again. – Fertilization is the fusion of sperm and egg to form a diploid zygote (zygote = offspring). – The process of gamete formation and fertilization is called sexual reproduction. 1 Gamete Formation II - Meiosis • The ploidy number refers to the number of chromosomes found in each parent somatic cell. • Because homologous pairs separate during meiosis, a gamete has only one allele from each pair of alleles. • If the allelic pair is Ww, a gamete would contain either a W or a w, but not both. • Ww represents the genotype of an individual. • Gametes are represented by W or w. • A somatic cell has a diploid number of chromosomes present • Sex cells have a haploid # Expression of Dominance • Traits can be expressed as completely dominant, incompletely dominant or even codominant. – Complete dominance is when the dominant allele is expressed over the recessive allele (if it is present in the genotype of the parent. – Codominance is when both alleles are equally expressed in a heterozygote. – Incomplete dominance is when a heterozygote does not express the dominant or recessive allele, but instead shows an intermediate phenotype, or a blending of the traits Phenotype and Genotype II •A capital letter indicates a dominant allele. –An example is W for a widow’s peak. •A lowercase letter indicates a recessive allele. – Expressed in the absence of a dominant allele. –An example is w for continuous hairline. Gamete Formation III - Meiosis Phenotype and Genotype I • When we track traits, we can predict the potential of an offspring and what they will look like. – A phenotype is the physical trait of the individual. – A genotype is the genetic composition of an individual which can be represented by letters and short descriptive phrases. Genotype and Phenotype III • Homozygous individuals are organisms that have two alleles that are the same. – Example, WW stands for homozygous dominant and ww stands for homozygous recessive. • Heterozygous individuals are organisms that have two alleles that are different. – Example, Ww. • Both WW and Ww result in widow’s peak, two genotypes with the same phenotype. 2 One-Trait Crosses One-Trait Crosses • One-trait crosses are when one trait such as type of hairline is being considered. • When performing crosses, the original parents are called the parental generation – or P generation • All of the P1 children are the filial generation – or F generation (F1, F2, etc). • If you know the genotype of the parents, it is possible to determine the gametes and use a Punnett square to determine the phenotypic ratio among the offspring – A punnett square is a prediction of potential offspring and their statistical ratio of possible occurance One-Trait Crosses • Notice the results are a 3:1 ratio • The ratio is used to state the chance of a particular phenotype • A 3:1 ratio means that there is a 75% chance of the dominant phenotype and a 25% chance of the recessive phenotype Pedigrees - Tracking Family Traits • A pedigree chart shows the pattern of inheritance of a characteristic within a family. • The particular pattern indicates the manner in which a characteristic is inherited. One-Trait Crosses • In the cross given here, notice that one parent is homozygous recessive. • An individual that is homozygous (dominant or recessive) is considered a purebred Pedigrees • Pedigree charts represent males with squares and females with circles. • Recessive and dominant alleles have different patterns of inheritance. • Genetic counselors construct pedigrees to determine the mode of inheritance of a condition. 3 An Example Pedigree Polygenic Inheritance • Polygenic traits are governed by more than one gene pair. • Several pairs of genes may be involved in determining a phenotype. • Such traits produce a continuous variation Polygenic Inheritance - Skin Color • The inheritance of skin color is determined by an unknown number of genes and is a classic example of polygenic inheritance. • A range of phenotypes exist and several possible phenotypes fall between the two extremes of very dark and very light. • Many human traits, like allergies, schizophrenia, hypertension, diabetes, cancers, and phobias, appear to be due to the combined action of many genes plus environmental influences. Codominance - ABO Blood Types Multiple Alleles Traits • Inheritance of multiple alleles occurs when more than two alternative alleles exist for a particular genotype • A person’s blood type is an example of a trait determined by multiple alleles. • Each individual inherits only two alleles for these genes, but the combination of the expression of this trait makes the phenotype different. Inheritance of blood type • A person can have an allele for an A antigen (blood type A) or a B antigen (blood type B), both A and B antigens (blood type AB), or no antigen (blood type O) on the red blood cells. • Human blood types can be type A (AA or AO), type B (BB or BO), type AB (AB), or type O (OO). 4 Incomplete dominance 5