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More Mendelian genetics Real Biologists of Genius • We salute you Mr. Gregor Mendel. An Austrian monk with a love for peas, you published data that showed blending inheritance was incorrect and introduced hereditary factors occurring in discrete pairs. Mendelian Genetics • Mendel knew that his 'factors' were discrete and non-blending. • He also knew much more about the behavior of these units of inheritance. • So let’s revisit his peas! Law of Segregation • Mendel's First Law (Law of Segregation): Mendel determined that each individual has two copies of each gene (e.g., Pp). • These copies are called alleles. If both alleles are the same, then the individual is homozygous (e.g., PP or pp). • If the two alleles are different, then the individual is heterozygous (e.g., Pp). • When an individual creates gametes (sex cells: egg or sperm in humans, egg or pollen grain in plants), only one of each allele is packaged in the gamete. • Mendel determined that which allele appears in the gamete is random, with each allele having a 50% chance. This rule is the Law of Segregation. Flower color • Pea flowers are either purple or white. • Peas fertilize themselves, so • white white and purple purple. • called true-breeding • But… • …if you cross a truebreeding purple with a true-breeding white… • …all of the offspring have purple flowers. • Hence Mendel said that purple was dominant to white. • PP: purple • pp: white • Pp: purple! Terms to understand • gene: stretch of DNA that codes for a particular trait. (e.g., flower color) • allele: a particular variant of a gene (e.g., purple) • genotype: what alleles an individual has for a particular trait or set of traits (e.g., Pp) • phenotype: the expression of the genes; what the individual looks like (e.g., purple) • dominant trait: an allele that is expressed no matter what the other allele is (e.g., purple flower color being dominant to white flower color in pea plants) • recessive trait: an allele that is only expressed if it is the only allele present (i.e., both alleles are the same) (e.g., white flower being recessive to purple flower color) Terms to understand • homozygous: has 2 copies of the same allele for a given trait (e.g., PP or pp) • heterozygous: has 1 copy of each of two alleles for a given trait (e.g., Pp) • F1 generation: the kids of the parents • F2 generation: the grandkids of the parents (kids of F1) • gamete: sex cell (egg or sperm); only has ONE allele for each gene since it only has one homologous chromosome (either the one you received from Mom or the one you received from Dad) • True-breeding: homozygous for the trait. Forming gametes • How many different gametes can PP make? • 1 • P • How many different gametes can Pp make? • 2 • P or p • When forming gametes, you always need one allele for each gene. • How many different gametes can PPTt make? • 2 • PT or Pt Determining the number of different gametes possible • • • • • • • • • • AaBBCc? 2x1x2=4 AaBbCC? 2x2x1=4 AaBbCcDd? 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 16 AAbbCCddEE? 1x1x1x1x1=1 What is it? AbCdE • Which of the following gametes can this parent (AABbCCDdeeFf) make? a. AAbCEf b. ABCDEF c. abcdef d. ABCdef • d is the answer. • What is the chance of that parent producing that gamete? • 1/8 Why? Determining the number of different alleles • • • • • • • • AaBBCc? 2 + 1 + 2 = 5 alleles AaBbCC? 2 + 2 + 1 = 5 alleles AaBbCcDd? 2+2+2+2=8 AAbbCCddEE? 1+1+1+1+1=5 How many different genes are shown at right? • 3, 3, 4, and 5 (top to bottom) Other terms not on the handout • Incomplete dominance: in this case, the presence of a single gene to code for a particular protein (enzyme) is insufficient to produce the full trait. • Why? • Because you don’t have enough of the enzyme to fully express the trait! Ex. In snapdragons, • RR = red, • rr = white, • Rr = pink! Incomplete Dominance Co-dominant alleles: Human ABO blood type • There are 2 dominant alleles (A and B) and one recessive (O). • A and B alleles determine sugars present on cell membrane of red blood cells. • If you have A, then you produce type A sugars. • If you have B, then you produce type B sugars. • If you have O, then you produce no sugars. Possible Genotypes Possible Phenotypes AA type A AO type A BB type B BO type B AB type AB OO type O Transfusions • When you need a blood transfusion, they try to match blood types. • If you give type A blood to someone without type A blood, they have no type A blood sugars on their own red blood cells so their immune system will attack the transfused blood because it recognizes that it is foreign. • While they try to give type A blood to a person with blood type A, type O could also be used. • Why? Because there are no blood sugars in type O blood that the type A person’s body hasn’t seen. • Therefore, type O is called the universal donor and type AB is the universal recipient. What about positive and negative? • That’s a different gene. • The Rh factor is another sugar on red blood cells. • It’s called Rh for Rhesus, as it was first found in a Rhesus monkey. • You are Rh positive if you have the blood sugar, but Rh negative if you do not. • Thus the ultimate donor is? • O negative • Ultimate recipient? • AB positive What are the relative frequencies of these blood types in humans? • • • • • • • • O Positive O Negative A Positive A Negative B Positive B Negative AB Positive AB Negative 37% 6% 34% 6% 10% 2% 4% 1% Some More Terms • Monohybrid cross: cross between two monohybrids (only a single trait is tracked) (e.g., Pp x Pp) • Dihybrid cross: cross between two dihybrids (e.g., PpYy x PpYy). Dihybrid Cross Some More Terms • Pleiotropic: when a single gene determines more than one phenotype for an organism (gene that lengthens bones lengthens legs and arms). • Gene for sickle cell affects vulnerability to malaria and sickle cell anemia. Polygenic traits • A trait that is affected by multiple genes • These traits are not discrete (yes or no) but show continuous variation. • E.g. skin color, height, etc. Test Cross • Test cross: When a single trait is being studied, a test cross is a cross between an individual with the dominant phenotype but of unknown genotype (homozygous or heterozygous) with a homozygous recessive individual. If the unknown is heterozygous, then approximately 50% of the offspring should display the recessive phenotype.