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Genetics and Inheritance Chapter 10: Section 1 Puppy-Dog Creations… Choose BLUE or YELLOW paper FEMALE or MALE SQUARE eyes or ROUND eyes OVAL nose or TRIANGULAR nose POINTED teeth or SQUARE teeth ***The rest is up to you!*** Note to Students: In this section vocabulary is extremely important. It leads the way to the rest of your understanding. As always, ask questions if you do not understand! VOCABULARY TRAITS- a genetic (inherited) characteristic HEREDITY- The passing of traits from parent to offspring GENETICS- the branch of biology that studies heredity (inherited traits) Gregor Mendel Who? Monk (priest) What? Curious gardener trained in math and science When? 1851 is when it all began… Where? Austria (central Europe) Curiosity Leads the Way He was curious as to why plants, specifically garden pea plants, had different physical characteristics (short/tall, yellow seeds/green seeds, purple/white flowers, etc.) Observed that TRAITS were often similar to those of their parents Spent over 10 years experimenting with the thousands of pea plants to understand HEREDITY He was the first person to succeed in predicting how traits are transferred from one generation to the next. His work formed the foundation of GENETICS Why Pea Plants? Easy to grow Grow quickly Produce large number of offspring in one generation (lots of data available at one time) They have many traits that exist in only two forms (makes it easier to study them) Pea plants have both male and female parts on the same flower; so fertilization can be controlled. Plant Vocabulary Gametes- male and female sex cells Fertilization- male gamete unites with the female gamete Zygote- the fertilized cell that develops into a seed. Pollination- transfer of pollen grains from male reproductive organ to female reproductive organ. Pistil-female sex cells Stamen-male sex cells (pollen) NOTE- in nature these plants would be selfpollinating Mendel developed a way to cross-pollinate pea plants – Remove pollen from a flower on one plant and brush it on a flower of a second plant – To prevent selfpollination he carefully removed the stamens from the flowers on the second plants FIGURE 10.1 Vocabulary Continued Self-pollinating- The pollen of one flower lands on the pistil of the same flower Cross-Pollinating- The pollen of one flower is placed on the pistil of a different flower. **To prevent self-pollination Mendel removed the stamen from the flowers on the second flower.** Pure bred- always produces offspring with the same form of a trait as the parent….its pure! Let the Experiment Begin! Mendel crossed PUREBRED plants with opposite forms of the same trait. For example he crossed a purebred tall plant with a purebred short plant. – Why purebreds??? Because those were the plants that he knew what to expect from the offspring. Mendel carefully controlled his experiments making sure that he studied only one trait at a time to control the variables. Experiment #1 Characteristic: Tall Plant vs Short Plant NOTE: The parent plants were called the parent generation or P generation and the offspring from this cross were called the F1 generation. Results: ALL F1 generation plants were tall! The short trait had “disappeared”. Experiment #2 He then allowed all of the F1 generation to self-pollinate. This generation was called the F2 generation. Results: He discovered that about ¾ of them were tall and ¼ were short. Short trait had returned! Experiment #3-??? He tested all of the other main traits – Flower color, Seed shape, seed color, seed coat color, pod shape, pod color, and flower position. Results: All of the traits had the same results as plant height! Hybrids- offspring of parents that have different forms of a trait. Monohybrid- Mendel’s first experiments were monohybrids because they differed only by a single trait. Conclusions Individual factors must control the inheritance of traits in peas. – Factors exist in pairs – Female contributes one trait and the male contributes the other – One factor can mask/hide the other factor Vocabulary…cont. “Factors” that control traits are called GENES, they are located on chromosomes. Different forms of a gene are called ALLELES ex: two alleles for height: short and tall, purple vs. white An organism's two alleles are located on different copies of a chromosome one from mom and one from dad. Individual alleles control the inheritance of traits. Some alleles are dominant while others are recessive. *Dominant alleles will always show up if they are present. *Recessive alleles are covered up when dominants are present. Mendel concluded that every plant in the F1 generation had one allele for Tall height and one allele for short height. Take out your puppy-dogs! – Answer Questions 1-2 – Dominant alleles are: B (blue skin), R (round eyes), T (triangular nose), and P (pointed teeth) The Law of Segregation Recall the results of Mendel’s cross between F1 plants Rules: Each tall plant in the F1 generation carried one dominant allele for tallness and one unexpressed recessive allele for shortness. (F1 plants received 1 allele from each P-generation parent) The Law: Every individual has two alleles of each gene. When gametes are produced, each gamete receives one of these alleles at random. There are a total of four combinations of alleles. Another Rule from Mendel: Rule of Dominance- Only one of the two alleles (dominant allele) for each trait actually determines the trait that will show up. The alternate form of the trait (recessive allele) is only present if the dominant trait is not. History Rap-up Mendel tried to present his results to other scientists; however, some felt that he had oversimplified inheritance while others would not even read his findings. It took 34 years before people began to realize how important his work really was. Today Mendel is often referred to as the FATHER OF GENETICS Question of the Day… Why do you think people often look very similar to other family members, but also different? How genetically similar are you to your classmates??? Class Traits activity Compare Notes Finish Activity Vocabulary Once more… Phenotype- its physical appearance (visible traits) Phenotype Genotype Genotype- genetic makeup or allele combinations. Tall TT Tall Tt Homozygous (pure bred)organism with two identical alleles for a trait (purebred) – Homozygous dominant (TT) – Homozygous recessive (tt) Short tt Heterozygous (hybrid)- two different alleles for the same trait (hybrid) Notice: two genotypes for tall-can’t tell the difference by looking at them. Finish Class Survey Activity Bell Work: 11-8 Take out your simple genetics practice problems that you picked up on Friday. Complete the front page, using your notes to help you. What is probability? The likelihood that a particular event will occur. For example we would say that any coin that is tossed will have a 1 in 2 chances of landing heads up…BUT if you were to toss a coin 20 times you might expect it to be 10 heads and 10 tails but that might not be the case. Laws of probability PREDICT what is likely to occur not necessarily what WILL occur. However, the more tosses you make, the more accurate you’ll be. Probability in Genetics Mendel, mathematician and scientist, was the first to recognize that the principles of probability can be used to predict the results of genetic crosses. Mendel carefully counted the offspring from every cross. Every time he crossed two hybrid plants (Tt) ¾ of the F1 generation would be tall and ¼ would be short. Mendel could say that the probability of such a cross producing a tall plant was 3 in 4 chances. PUNNET SQUARES Used to relate probability to genetics. Shows all of the possible outcomes of a genetic cross Allows you to determine the probability of a particular outcome (possible genotypes in the offspring) You can predict probabilities of the offspring IF you know the genotypes of the parents. Monohybrid Crosses You need a 2x2 box Each parent can produce two kinds of gametes or alleles for this trait. Once the boxes are filled in you have all of the possible genotypes for a particular trait From that information you can determine the phenotypes. Understanding the Crosses Always use the same letter for different alleles of the same gene. Capital Letters stand for dominant alleles. Lower case letters stand for recessive alleles Dominant allele is always written first. It does NOT matter where each parent is placed. One on top, one on the left side. Meaning Behind the Symbols P-generation: Tall Purebred (TT) and Short Purebred (tt) All four possibilities posses a tall gene so in every case the recessive, short gene, will be hidden. T T t Tt Tt t Tt Tt All F1 plants are considered to be hybridsthey have two different alleles for the same trait, rather than being purebreds. Punnet Squares Practice Sheet Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses He used Peas that differed from each other by 2 traits instead of just one. The question he was asking: Will the two traits stay together in the next generation or will they be inherited independently of each other? Dihybrid Cross Experiment Characteristics: True-bred round, yellow seeds and a true-bred wrinkled, green seeds He already knew: Round and Yellow were dominant from his monohybrid crosses. Results: All Seeds were round and yellow. Dihybrid Cross Experiment #2 Allow the F1 generation to self pollinate. Results were that F2 varied greatly: round/yellow seeds, wrinkled/green seeds, round/green seeds, and wrinkled/yellow seeds. In the F2 generation he again counted a definite ratio of physical characteristics: 9 round/yellow, 3 round/green, 3 wrinkled/yellow, and 1 wrinkled/green (9:3:3:1) Conclusions to Dihybrid Cross Experiments Mendel was able to express his second Law from the results and he called it: The Law of Independent Assortment – Genes of different traits are inherited independently Why was he able to make this conclusion? Because if the alleles for seed shape and color were inherited together only 2 kinds of pea seeds would have been produced instead of variations of all combinations. Dihybrid Punnet Squares 4x4 box because each combination must be considered. 2 traits per box See Figure 10.8 in your book (pg 261). Dihybrid Cross Punnet Square Example: What happens if a man who is heterozygous brown eyes AND heterozygous tongue roller has children with a woman who is homozygous blue eyes AND heterozygous tongue roller?? What is the chance that their child will be a blue eyed non-tongue roller? Due to Mendel’s Law of Independent Assortment, we must look at all possible allele combinations that can go into sperm and egg. We will use a method of distribution you may have seen in math class called FOIL. FOIL stands for First, Outside, Inside, Last. Practice: Foil the following genotype: BbWw (F) _____, (O) ______, (I) _____, (L) ____ Now we’re ready to tackle the example problem above. What happens if a man who is heterozygous brown eyes AND heterozygous tongue roller has children with a woman who is homozygous blue eyes AND heterozygous tongue roller?? Dad’s Genotypes: ____________ Possible Sperm Alleles: ______ or _______ or ______ or _______ Mom’s Genotypes: _____________ _____________ Possible Egg Alleles: ______ or _______ or _______ or _________ _____________ What is the chance their child will be a blue-eyed non-tongue roller? ______ out of _____ or ______% Dad: Homozygous blue eyes AND Heterozygous Widow’s Peak ____________ Mom: Heterozygous brown eyes AND Heterozygous Widow’s Peak ___________ Genes Discovery Worksheet Dihybrid Cross Worksheet Puppy Dog madness Activity Oompa Loompa Activity. Quiz