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1 MENDEL’S THEORY Introduction to Genetics! Terms 2 Heredity – the passing of characters from parents to offspring Cross: Mating or breeding of two individuals Genetics : the branch of biology that focuses on heredity Terms 3 Artificial fertilization Hybrid Offspring formed from parents having different forms of a trait Cross pollination Crossing two contrasting traits during pollination Gregor Mendel 4 Austrian Monk Father of Genetics Crossed Pisum sativum (garden pea) and developed the patterns of genetics 5 People thought that the traits just blended Example: tall + short = medium Example: red + white = pink Red + Blue = purple Why the Pea Plant? 6 1. Characteristics exist in two clearly different forms Example: white or purple flower, yellow or green pod, round or wrinkled seed etc…. Why the Pea Plant? 7 2. 3. Male and female reproductive parts are enclosed in the same flower They possess good characteristics for breeding a) b) c) d) Small Grow easily Mature quickly Produce many offspring 8 THE EXPERIMENT The Experiment 9 Mendel’s first experiments were monohybrid crosses (crosses that include one pair of contrasting traits) Flower color Steps 10 1. Mendel allowed each variety of garden pea to self pollinate This insured true-breeding or a purebred P generation (parental) a) b) I. These are the first two individuals that are crossed in a breeding experiment Steps 11 2. Cross pollination Crossed 2 P generations that had contrasting traits a) I. b) c) Example: one white and one purple Result: Showed only one trait. The other disappeared F1 generation (first filial) Steps 12 3. Self pollination between F1 generations a) b) c) d) Results: F2 generations The trait reappeared 705 to 224 3:1 ratio 13 14 15 16 17 MENDEL’S HYPOTHESIS Mendel’s Hypothesis 18 1. 2. For each inherited character, an individual has two copies of the gene – one from each parent. There are alternative versions of genes Alleles: different versions of genes a) I. II. Example: purple or white Offspring receive one allele from each parent Mendel’s Hypothesis 19 3. When two different alleles occur together, one of them may be completely expressed, while the other may have no observable effect on the organism’s appearance. a) b) Dominant: The expressed form of the character Recessive: The trait that is not expressed when the dominant form is present Brown is a dominant eye color. Mendel’s Hypothesis 20 4. When gametes are formed, the alleles for each gene in an individual separate independently of one another. a) b) Gametes carry only one allele for each inherited character During fertilization, each gamete contributes one allele Called Law of Segregation Terms 21 Dominate alleles are Capitalized (G) Recessive alleles are lower case (g) Homozygous: two alleles of a particular gene present in an individual are the same (GG, gg) Heterozygous: alleles of a particular gene present in an individual are different (Gg) Example 22 If you use B for your alleles then… Homozygous Dominant (or pure dominant) = BB Heterozygous = Bb Homozygous Recessive (or pure recessive) = bb 23 Genotype: Genetic makeup of an organism What it is made of (genes) The set of alleles that an individual has for a character Ex BB, Bb, bb Phenotype: Physical appearance of a character What it looks like Example: blue eyes, red hair, tall, short