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Patterns of Inheritance • aka Genetics • Parents pass heritable traits to offspring (genes) • Gregor Mendel – 1860’s, Austrian monk experimented with garden peas – tracked traits from parents to subsequent generations How? • Cross fertilization – Pollen from one plant to fertilize another plant • P = Parents • F1 = 1st generation of offspring • Hybrid (cross) = offspring of two different varieties – e.g. purple vs. white flowers • Mendel tracked 7 characteristics – Each had two distinct forms – Controlled • Started with pure varieties • Monohybrid cross – Differs by one characteristic • No blending (pink) – What happened to the white? • Showed up in F2 Mendel’s 4 hypotheses 1. Alternate versions of each gene = alleles (Purple or White) 2. Offspring inherit 2 alleles, 1 from each parent for each characteristic (color) • • Homozygous = each allele is the same (PP or pp) Heterozygous = different alleles (Pp) 3. Dominant = determines appearance, and Recessive = not apparent 4. Gametes (sperm or egg) carry only one allele as a result of pair separation during meiosis = Law of segregation • Pure parent plants – All purple (PP) – All white (pp) • Gametes will be either P or p • F1 are all purple because of dominance (Pp) • F2 results in a mathematically predictable 3:1 ratio • Phenotype = expressed traits • Genotype = genetic makeup • Punnett square – Hybrid posibilities • Alleles of a gene reside at the same locus on homologous chromosomes – Separated by independent assortment in meiosis…ultimately within separate gametes What happens if there are 2 characteristics? • Are they packaged together? Or, independently from one another? • Seed characteristics (alleles) – Round (R) or wrinkled (r) – Yellow (Y) or green (y) • Hypothesis: They are packaged together. Hypothesis: Each pair of alleles are independent of one another • F1 produces equal amounts of 4 possible genotypes • F2 reveals even more genotypic possibilities (9:3:3:1) • Dihybrid cross is equivalent to two monohybrid crosses (12:4 or 3:1) • Law of independent assortment • Black coat is dominant (B) • Chocolate coat is recessive (b) • Normal vision (N) vs. blind (n) • What are the results of a dihybrid cross of heterozygous parents (black, normal vision) ? *progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) causes blindness • Phenotype of heterozygous parents? • Genotype of heterozygous parents? • Gamete possibilities – Sperm? – Eggs? • Black coat is dominant (B) • Chocolate coat is recessive (b) • Normal vision (N) vs. blind (n) • What are the results of a dihybrid cross of heterozygous parents (black, normal vision) ? • Phenotype of heterozygous parents? black, normal vision • Genotype of heterozygous parents? BbNn x BbNn • Gamete possibilities – Sperm: BN, bN, Bn, bn – Eggs: BN, bN, Bn, bn BN Sperm: BN, bN, Bn, bn Eggs: BN, bN, Bn, bn BN bN • What is the genotypic ratio of the offspring? • What is the phenotypic ratio of the offspring? Bn bn bN Bn bn Sperm: BN, bN, Bn, bn Eggs: BN, bN, Bn, bn 9 3 3 1 BN bN Bn BN BNBN BNbN BNBn bN bNBN bNbN bNBn Bn BnBN BnbN BnBn Bnbn bnBN bnbN bnBn bnbn bn bn BNbn bNbn • Can you know the genotype by looking at the phenotype? • What are their genotype possibilities? • Can you know the genotype by looking at the phenotype? • bb • What are their genotype possibilities? • BB or Bb Testcross • Perform a testcross to determine an unknown genotype Mate an unknown genotype (black lab) X homozygous recessive (chocolate lab) Some examples of dominant and recessive traits in humans (at one gene locus) Class total • • • • • • • • Bent pinky – dominant (BB or Bb) Blue eyes – recessive (ee) No mid-digital hair – recessive (mm) Tongue rolling – dominant (RR or Rr) Widow’s Peak – dominant (WW or Ww) Right over left Thumb – recessive (cc) Attached ear lobes – recessive (aa) Hitchhiker’s thumb – recessive (hh) How do we determine inheritance of human traits? • Can’t Testcross • Pedigree – family tree of genetic history • E.g. tracking deafness (dd) in an isolated family – Since deafness appeared in F1 of grandparents…carriers • Abigail? John? Hepzibah? Other single gene disorders • Recessive – Albinism – Cystic fibrosis • Thick mucous excretion of lungs and other organs; requires life long treatment – Sickle cell anemia • Dominant – Extra fingers, toes – Webbed fingers, toes – Dwarfism • Normal body; short arms and legs • DD die, Dd survive, nondwarfs (99.99% pop.) are dd David Rappaport • Probability increases with less variability (inbreeding) • Dominant lethal disorders less common; usually kill embryo • Identifying disorders: – Amniocentesis is sampling of amniotic fluid – Chorionic villus sampling (CVS) of placental tissue – Ultrasound Traits that don’t conform to Mendel’s laws • Incomplete dominance – E.g. snapdragons – Heterozygotes differ from homozygotes – Predictable 1:2:1 ratio • Different than “blending” hypothesis – No testcross necessary More than two alleles per gene • 3 alleles in blood type – OAB – 4 possible phenotypes = O, A, B, AB – 6 possible genotypes; co-dominance • Rh factor = “+” and “-” along with O, B, A – Rhesus incompatibility disease – 30 combinations; much more complicated • “O-” was considered universal donor; but new research shows not always the case Pleiotropy • Gene influences multiple characteristics Polygenic Inheritance • Additive effects of multiple genes on a single phenotypic characteristic Sex-linked genes • X-linked recessive alleles • More common in males than females – Males only needs to inherit one sex-linked recessive allele from mom to be expressed – Females has to inherit two sex-linked recessive alleles for expression • Examples – Red-green color blindness – Hemophilia