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Genetics & Inheritance Gregor Mendel • Father of Genetics • worked in a monastery • Studied how traits were passed from parents to offspring Experimental Approach • Chose garden peas because: – Self-fertilizing – True-breeding Experimental Approach • self-pollinated • cross-pollinated by human manipulation btwn two diff. plants • Mendel cross-fertilized truebreeding garden pea plants having clearly contrasting traits Mendel’s Experiment 1. P Generation • Self-pollinated for several generations to get “true-breeding” • Always produce offspring w/ the desired trait 2. F1 Generation • Cross-pollinated P individuals with contrasting traits • purple X white 3. F2 Generation • Self-pollinated an F1 individual • purple X purple Mendel Wondered: Why does one form of the trait disappear in the first generation (F1 ), only to show up in the second generation (F2 )?? Some Terms Used In Genetics • Dominant (G): When present, “masks” the other trait • Recessive (g): Has no effect on the organism when the dominant allele is present Genetic Terms Basic Genetics • Observable characters are the result of genes that come in slightly different molecular forms called alleles. Genetic Concepts • Genotype is the alleles present (I.e. Aa, or aa) (this individuals “genetic makeup” • Phenotype is what you see (I.e. brown, tall) Some Terms Used In Genetics • Homozygous = alleles are the same – dominant =“AA” –recessive = “aa” • Heterozygous = alleles differ (“Aa”). – One allele is dominant (A) –Second allele is recessive (a) º Dominant allele blocks expression of recessive product Probability • Likelihood that a specific event will occur • May be expressed at fraction, decimal, percent or ratio • Every time an event happens it has equal probability of happening regardless of # of times it has happened before Predicting results of monohybrid cross • Use a punnett square • Tracks only one trait Phenotypic/Genotypic Ratios • Phenotypic: Dominant:recessive (3:1) • Genotypic: HH:Hh:hh (1:2:1) or (1HH:2Hh:1hh) • Totals must equal # of boxes in punnett square Punnett Squares • Dihybrid cross: examines 2 traits together Testcross • Cross an individual w/ an unknown genotype (dominant pheno) w/ a homozygous recessive - if any offspring are recessive, the unknown must be heterozygous • Plant produces all purple flowers, what is its genotype? PP or Pp? P P P p p Pp p Pp Pp Pp p p Pp Pp pp pp Complete Dominance • Dominant allele completely masks the expression of another –Heterozygous and homozygous dominant individuals show same phenotype X Incomplete Dominance • Dominant allele cannot completely mask the expression of another • Have intermediate phenotype – Example: red snapdragons crossed with white ones yield pink. Codominance – A white horse and a black horse produce horses with black and white hairs – both alleles are expressed –Roan horse: Multiple Alleles • Controlled by 3 + alleles of a gene • Ex: Blood Types • Phenotype Genotype A IAIA or IAi B IBIB or IBi AB IAIB O ii Single Allele Traits • Cystic fibrosis • Hair on third knuckle • Earlobe attachment • Tongue rolling Polygenic Traits • Characteristic controlled by several genes – skin, hair, eye color Complex Characters • Influenced by genes & environment – Polygenic traits – Height, heart disease cancer Effect of Gene Location • Sex-linked genes & traits – X Linked • Traits found only on the X chromosome • Males get only 1 allele because they have only 1 X • Hemophilia • Colorblindness (recessive) • ALD (Lorenzo’s oil) Sex-linked traits Dihybrid Cross • Predict results of 2 traits Dihybrid Cross Sex Chromosomes & Autosomes • Sex C’some determine gender – Male = XY, Female = XX • Autosomes: all other c’somes Male & Female Karyotypes Mendel's Law of Segregation • Diploid organisms inherit two genes per trait • A pair of factors (alleles) is segregated or separated during the formation of gametes (meiosis – anaphase II) so sperm or egg only carry one allele for each trait • If mom is Aa..you either get A or a Law of Independent Assortment • Factors for different characteristics are distributed to gametes independently of one another • Only true for genes on separate c’somes or far apart on same c’some • Ex: white flowers and smooth pods are independent of each other OR dimples and skin color are independent of each other Mutations= Ch 12 • Change in a gene – may be due to copying incorrectly or damaged • Most are recessive • Can be good, bad, or have no effect • Somatic ones (body cells) affect only the organism • If occurs in germ cell (gametes), may be passed to offspring Chromosome Mutations • Deletion - lose a piece of c’some • Inversion - a piece flips around • Translocation - piece of c’some attaches itself to a different c’some • non-disjunction - homologues don’t separate during meiosis – Trisomy 21 = Down Syndrome …..47X – XXY = Klinefelters Syndrome in males (feminine, infertile)…..47X – X = Turners (female but infertile)….monosomy….45X Chromosome Mutations • Klinefelters • Turner Syndrome Gene Mutations Gene Mutations • Involve one or more nucleotides in a strand of DNA (not whole chromosome) • Point mutations-ONE error – Substitution • THE DOG BIT THE CAT • THE DOG BIT THE CAR • Sickle Cell anemia: subs A for T defective hemoglobin – Deletion-deletes a nucleotide • THE CAT ATE THE FAT RAT • THE ATA TET HEF ATR ATT – Insertion-inserts a nucleotide • THE CAT ATE THE FAT RAT • THE CAT ATE THE FAT RATS • Both cause frameshift mutations! Gene Mutations • Frameshift throws off entire sequence… caused by deletions or additions Detecting Genetic Disorders • Genetic screening: examines your genetic makeup & potential risk of passing disorders to offspring followed by genetic counseling to discuss results • Before Birth on fetus – Amniocentesis: analyze amniotic fluid looks at fetal cells, proteins, do karyotype – Chorionic Villi Sampling (CVS): from tissue between placenta & fetus, do karyotype Treating Genetic Disorders • Symptom-relieving – Ex: insulin injections for diabetic • Gene Therapy – Replace defective gene w/ copy of a healthy one • Somatic cell therapy alters only body cells • Germ cell therapy alters sperm or egg Linkage groups • Genes located on the same c’some are linked • You inherit them together - unless crossing over separates them= chromosome maps Crossing Over • The further apart two genes are from each other on the c’some the likelier they are to be separated by crossovers Genetic Disorders Pedigrees • Way of tracing traits through a family Male - has trait Female - has trait Male- doesn’t have trait Male - carrier Female - doesn’t have trait Female - carrier • Carrier: doesn’t express trait, but can pass it on to offspring Pedigree for Cystic Fibrosis