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MENDELIAN GENETICS LEARNING OBJECTIVES SWBAT: Describe the connection between the process of meiosis and the passage of traits from parent to offspring SWBAT: Apply mathematics to determine Mendelian patterns of inheritance. SWBAT: Explain how the inheritance patterns of many traits cannot be accounted for by Mendelian genetics. What do you already know about Gregor Mendel and/or Mendelian genetics? GREGOR MENDEL Prevailing theory of inheritance 1800’s = blending Problem: over time and many generations, a very uniform population would be produced Mendel introduced the idea of a “particulate” method of inheritance. Parents pass on discrete units of heritable material that can be shuffled and recombined in a number of ways. All this BEFORE scientists knew anything about chromosomes and the genes they were made of! TERMS TO KNOW True- breeding plants - plants that over many generations of self-pollinating, produce only the same variety as the parent plant Hybridization - mating or crossing of 2 truebreeding varieties P generation - the true-breeding parents F 1 generation - the first generation hybrid offspring F 2 generation - F 1 self-pollination offspring generation (F 1 X F 1 ) WHY PEA PLANTS? Many varieties with easily measurable and distinct characters. Mating could be strictly controlled assuring parentage Only chose to track characters with 2 distinct alternative forms Mendel’s analysis of 1000’s of genetic crosses to F 2 helped him to develop two important principles of heredity. The Law of Segregation The Law of Independent Assortment THE LAW OF SEGREGATION By analyzing many F 1 crosses for seven characteristics in pea plants, he noted 2 things All F 1 generation plants displayed the same character. He called this the dominant trait In F 2, the offspring displayed the trait in a 3:1 ratio, dominant: recessive. This meant that the recessive trait did not disappear, but was hidden He developed a model to explain what he observed. F I G U R E 11 . 3 - 3 Experiment P Generation (true-breeding parents) Purple flowers White flowers F1 Generation (hybrids) All plants had purple flowers Self- or cross-pollination F2 Generation 705 purple-flowered 224 white-flowered plants plants THE LAW OF SEGREGATION Concepts included in his model and now applied to current knowledge of genes: 1. Alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characters. Now called alleles THE LAW OF SEGREGATION 2. For each character, an organism inherits 2 copies of a gene, one from each parent. Remember- he knew nothing about DNA or chromosomes! THE LAW OF SEGREGATION 3. If the two alleles at a locus dif fer, the dominant allele determines the organism’s appearance ( phenotype); the other, the recessive allele, has no noticeable ef fect. THE LAW OF SEGREGATION The two alleles for a heritable character segregate (separate from each other) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes. When does this happen? During which phase of meiosis? Or, put another way . . . When does the cell become haploid? Homologous chromosomes segregate in Anaphase 1 Punnett squares provide a visual representation of the law of segregation and can help predict the outcomes of fertilization . MORE TERMS TO KNOW Homozygous= having two identical alleles for a given gene Heterozygous= having two different alleles for a given gene Genotype= the genetic makeup, or set of alleles, of at organism Phenotype = the observable physical and physiological traits of an organism, which are determined by its genetic makeup TEST CROSS Used to determine the genotype of an organism with the dominant phenotype THE LAW OF INDEPENDENT ASSORTMENT The second important principle of heredity developed by Mendel Looked at true breeds that differed in 2 characters Wanted to know if the 2 characters were transmitted together Dihybrid cross F I G U R E 11 . 8 Experiment YYRR P Generation yyrr Gametes YR yr F1 Generation YyRr Hypothesis of dependent assortment Predictions Hypothesis of independent assortment Sperm or Predicted offspring in F2 generation ¼ YR ¼ Yr ¼ yR ¼ yr Sperm ½ YR ½ yr ¼ YR ½ YR Eggs ½ yr YYRR YyRr YyRr ¾ yyrr ¼ Yr Eggs ¼ yR YYRR YYRr YyRR YyRr YYRr YYrr YyRr Yyrr YyRR YyRr yyRR yyRr YyRr yyRr yyrr ¼ Phenotypic ratio 3:1 ¼ yr 9 16 3 16 Yyrr 3 16 1 16 Phenotypic ratio 9:3:3:1 Results 315 108 101 32 Phenotypic ratio approximately 9:3:3:1 THE LAW OF INDEPENDENT ASSORTMENT Two or more genes assort independently. That is, each pair of alleles segregates independently of each other pair during gamete formation. Note: This applies only to allele pairs on different chromosomes, or very far apart on the same chromosome PROBABILIT Y LAWS Rule of multiplication: The probability that 2 or more independent events will occur together in a specific combination – multiply the probability of each Some inheritance patterns are more complex than simple Mendelian genetics Complete dominance The Mendelian idea of dominant and recessive alleles. Homozygous dominant and heterozygous look the same CodominanceBoth alleles “show” (roan horses) or there is more than one dominant Incomplete dominance The heterozygous shows a blending of the two traits Multiple alleles Genes that have more that 2 possible alleles Again like ABO Polygenetic inheritance 2 or more genes have an additive affect on a single character Skin color Height WHAT IS THE SPECIFIC INHERITANCE PATTERN OF THE FOLLOWING DISEASES? Cystic fibrosis Tay-Sachs Sickle cell Huntington’s LEARNING OBJECTIVES SWBAT: Describe the connection between the process of meiosis and the passage of traits from parent to offspring SWBAT: Apply mathematics to determine Mendelian patterns of inheritance. SWBAT: Explain how the inheritance patterns of many traits cannot be accounted for by Mendelian genetics. HOMEWORK FRQ Concept 11.1 text p. 212 (optional concept 11.2 p. 214)-TURN IN Inheritance patterns of diseases TOMORROW Sex linked inheritance Recombination and linkage Biotech basics PCR Micropipettes Gel electrophoresis The “taster gene” LEARNING OBJECTIVES SWBAT: Describe the connection between the process of meiosis and the passage of traits from parent to offspring SWBAT: Apply mathematics to determine Mendelian patterns of inheritance. SWBAT: Explain how the inheritance patterns of many traits cannot be accounted for by Mendelian genetics.