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Mendelian Genetics 1 Genetics Genetics: The study of heredity. Trait: A heritable characteristic. Gene: a portion of DNA that determines a characteristic Composed of nucleotides Locus = location on chromosome 2 per characteristic on autosomes 2 Single Gene Inheritance Patterns Allele: sequence of genetic material occupying the same gene locus on homologous chromosomes Or…alternative forms of the same gene 3 Single Gene Inheritance Genome: set of all genes necessary to specify an organism’s characteristics Genotype: listing of all genes present Phenotype: the way alleles express themselves – i.e. what you see 4 Pea Soup? Experiments done by Gregor Mendel using garden pea plants helped demonstrate how traits are inherited. A purebred individual receives the same characteristics from both parents. A hybrid individual receives different forms of a trait from each parent. 5 Gene Expression Dominant allele: masks effect of other alleles Recessive allele: masked by dominant alleles Homozygous: 2 identical alleles Heterozygous: 2 different alleles Recessive alleles are not less likely to be inherited, however they must be homozygous to be expressed. 6 Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Gregor Mendel: 1822-1884 Followed one trait at a time. Used highly visible traits; therefore easy to track his research. Since pea plants self-pollinate, may develop plants that are homozygous for many traits - Pure Line. 7 Mendel Rediscovered Mendel’s work was not recognized during his life; his unpublished studies were “resurrected” in the early 1900’s. His work is remarkable in that he did not know anything about genes, much less chromosomes, yet was able to reason the existence of alleles through his careful observations and recording of data. This is real science. 8 Mendel’s observations Mendel observed 7 traits of pea plants, alone and in various combinations: Flower Color Flower Position Pea Color Pea Shape Pea Pod Color Pea Pod Shape Height of Pea Plant 9 Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Mendel artificially pollinated plants to produce crosses and documented results. All offspring were identical to parents – unexpected finding. Crosses of offspring yielded: 3/4 showed phenotype of dominant gene. 10 Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Law of Dominance: when an organism has 2 different alleles for a given trait, the allele that is expressed is considered dominant. The other allele is recessive. 11 Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Law of Segregation: when gametes are formed by a diploid organism, the alleles that control a trait separate from one another into different gametes, retaining their individuality. 12 Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Law of Independent Assortment: Members of one gene pair separate from each other independently of the members of other gene pairs. 13