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Bellringer: Where did you get your 46 chromosomes from that you have in each of your cells? 1 UNIT 4 PART 1: MODERN GENETICS • In sexual reproduction the new individual develops from the zygote formed by the union of two gametes, one from each parent. • Because hereditary material comes from two different parents, the offspring is both similar to, and different from, each parent. 2 3 • GENETICS is the branch of biology that studies the ways in which hereditary information is passed on from parents to offspring. • Gregor Mendel, an Austrian monk, was the first to scientifically study heredity in the 1800s. He studied the inheritance of certain traits in peas using 1000’s of pea plants. 4 5 • Mendel then thought that each trait was controlled by a pair of “factors”, and that each factor could be one of two kinds. For example, one factor for green pod color and one for yellow pod color. • In a cross, the offspring receives one factor from each parent. • In a hybrid one factor may be hidden, but show itself again in later generations when fertilization brings together two of these recessive factors. Ex: yellow pod color 6 • When more was learned about cells, it was noted that the movements of the chromosomes during meiosis and fertilization would account for the separation and recombination of Mendel’s factors, so it was thought that the chromosomes might carry the factors. • The factors were then called genes. THE GENECHROMOSOME THEORY 7 8 ALLELES • It is now known that genes do carry the hereditary information, and that they are on chromosomes in a definite order. • Each body cell has two copies of the gene for each trait. These two copies can be the same or different. • Each form of a gene that controls a trait is called an allele. Pea pod color has two alleles: green and yellow. 9 • If the two alleles an organism has for a trait are the same, like GG, then the individual is said to be homozygous for that trait. If the alleles are different, Gg, the individual is said to be heterozygous. • The genetic makeup of an individual, the alleles it has, is called its genotype. The way the individual looks as a result of its genotype, its physical trait, is called its phenotype. GG = green; Gg = green; gg = yellow 10 11 SEX DETERMINATION • Scientists noticed that all the chromosome pairs were the same in both males and females except for one pair. • This pair determines the sex of the individual. These are the sex chromosomes. The other pairs are called autosomes. • In fruit flies, as well as humans, the two sex chromosomes look the same in the female 12 (XX), but are different in the male (XY). GENE • The traits Mendel studied were all on different chromosomes. • Most chromosomes have 100’s of genes so many are inherited together. • Genes on the same chromosome are said to be Linked. • abcde are linked, so are ABCDE. LINKAGE 13 LINKED TRAITS • Linked genes are inherited together. • Ex: – Blonde hair & Blue eyes – Red hair & Freckles – White cats & deafness 14 CROSSING OVER • Linked traits may be separated by crossingover of homologous chromosomes. • Genes A an a have crossed over and formed new linkage groups: – Abcde and aBCDE • Ex: – Brown hair & Blue eyes – Red hair & dark skin 15 • Genes determine the characteristics of an individual and are carried on chromosomes. • It still needed to be known what a gene was and how it worked. • Through a number of experiments it was determined that chromosomes were made of DNA and that DNA was the hereditary material. 16 DNA STRUCTURE • • A DNA molecule is made up of thousands of subunits called nucleotides. Each nucleotide has three parts: 1. phosphate group 2. five carbon sugar – deoxyribose 3. nitrogenous base • 4 kinds of bases: adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and thymine (T) 18 DNA STRUCTURE • • • Watson and Crick discovered the shape of DNA. Two chains of sugarphosphate groups running parallel to each other with pairs of bases joining the chains like rungs of a ladder. Twisting this ladder forms the double helix. 19 DNA STRUCTURE • Every DNA molecule has a different sequence of bases. • The order of bases along one strand of the double helix determines the matching bases on the other side: – A always pairs with T; C always with G – So if one strand is AGGTAC the other will be: TCCATG • The two strands are said to be complementary. • One gene = a sequence of hundreds of bases. 20 DNA REPLICATION • DNA can make copies of itself. • The two strands unzip at the weak bonds between the bases. • Two new molecules are built by attaching new nucleotides to each original strand which acts as a template, or pattern. 22 DNA REPLICATION • Each “new” strand will actually be half old and half new. • The copies of the DNA molecule can be passed on to the daughter cells during cell division. • This is how the chromosomes replicate. 23 DNA FUNCTION • How do the genes control all body traits and functions? • One Gene One Polypeptide – Each gene codes for the production of a different polypeptide chain. 24 • The work of the cell is carried out by the proteins it assembles. • Proteins are made up of chains of amino acids –i.e. polypeptide chains. • There are 20 different types of amino acids. • The sequence of amino acids determines the protein created and the shape it takes on. • Examples of proteins include: enzymes, hormones, and structural proteins. 25 26 Bellringer • The diagram below represents a microscopic structure observed during mitosis. The region indicated by letter A is known as • (1) an enzyme • (2) a gamete • (3) a gene • (4) an amino acid 28 29 Bellringer 2/22 • The inability of an organism to produce certain proteins can occur when an organism is lacking an enzyme needed to combine • (1) oxygen molecules • (2) simple sugars • (3) amino acids • (4) biological catalysts PROTEIN SYNTHESIS BASICS • One gene makes one polypeptide. • The order of bases of three adjacent nucleotides codes for a particular amino acid. These 3 bases are called a codon. – e.g. CAG is the DNA codon for glutamine – AAA is the DNA codon for phenylalanine • Some codons indicate where a polypeptide begins or ends. (Similar to punctuation in a sentence.) 31 • • • Protein Synthesis Helper: RNA Polypeptides are synthesized outside the nucleus, but the genes are inside the nucleus. RNA transcribes the genes from DNA & takes them to ribosomes outside the nucleus. RNA is similar to DNA, but it has 3 main differences: 1. the sugar is ribose 2. Uracil (U) takes the place of the Thymine (T) base 3. RNA is single stranded RNA DNA 32 33 THREE TYPES OF RNA Messenger (mRNA) Transfer (tRNA) Ribosomal (rRNA) copies the carries the genetic code for a instructions protein from DNA outside the nucleus carries amino Amino acid is acids to attached to chain if ribosomes anticodon pairs with codon in the nucleoli, site of the protein and rRNA assembly line in join together to the cytoplasm of 34 form a ribosome all cells Summary of Protein Synthesis • mRNA copies a gene (transcription) Translation: • mRNA attaches to a ribosome • tRNA brings amino acids to the ribosome, base pairing its anticodon to the mRNA codon • Amino acids connect to each other • When finished, a polypeptide is released 35 INSIDE THE NUCLEUS OUTSIDE THE NUCLEUS 36 37 Transcription & Translation Practice TAC CGG ACA GTG TAA TTC CAG TCA ATT (DNA) GCC UGU AUG AGU UAA ____ ____ ___ CAC ____ AUU ____ AAG ___ GUC ____ ____ ___ (RNA) Lys ____ Ser (Stop) Met ____ Ala Cys Ile ___ His ____ Val ____ ____ ___ ____ ___ (Amino Acid) 38 39 40 41 42 43 Bellringer 2/23 • DNA is able to control cellular activities most directly by regulating the process of (1) meiotic division (2) protein synthesis (3) active transport (4) selective breeding GENE EXPRESSION • • • • All your body cells originated from a single cell, so they all contain the same genes. However, each cell only turns on the genes it needs; it uses only some of the genetic material it contains. This is called expression. Expression causes differentiation- the formation of special types of cells. 45 DIFFERENTIATION • Chemical signals from within the cell or from other cells may activate certain genes. Ex: hormones • The proteins that are assembled in each type of cell are different so the cells themselves become different. 46 47 GENE EXPRESSION CAN BE AFFECTED BY THE ENVIRONMENT • • The Himalayan rabbit is white with some black fur on some cooler parts. If the skin on the back is shaved & an ice pack applied, the new fur will also be black. Alligators’ sex is determined by the egg temp.: >34oC for males, <30oC for females. 48 A hydrangea plant has blue flowers when grown in acidic soil, but has pink flowers when grown in basic soil. A clone of the pink-flowered plant is grown in acidic soil and produces blue flowers. This change in flower color is most likely due to (1) sexual reproduction in the plants, resulting in variation (2) asexual reproduction in the plants, resulting in variation (3) genes being expressed in different ways due to environmental conditions (4) a gene mutation that occurred after the clone was produced • Which organic compounds would be the best to analyze in order to determine if two species are closely related? • (1) fats • (2) starches • (3) sugars • (4) proteins Even though human proteins are synthesized from only 20 different amino acids, there are thousands of different proteins found in human cells. This great variety of proteins is possible because the 1)Size of a specific amino acid can vary within a protein 2)Chemical composition of a specific amino acid can vary 3)Sequence and number of amino acids can be different in each protein 4)Same amino acid can have many different properties 51 52