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INTRODUCTION TO GENETICS Before we start, did you know…. • Humans are 99.9% genetically identical – only 0.1% of our genetic make-up differs. • Our genes are remarkably similar to those of other life forms. For example, we share 98% of our genes with chimpanzees, 90% with mice, 85% with zebra fish, 21% with worms, and 7% with a simple bacterium such as E. coli. We share DNA…..with THEM?! Purpose of today’s class: • To understand how Mendel began the study of genetics. • To understand how genes lead to physical characteristics. 3 Questions! Background to Genetics GREGOR MENDEL: - priest who tended to a garden at his monastery. - Asked himself why different pea plants had different characteristics. Ex. Color, height, seed - THUS BEGAN GENETICS! QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Mendel’s Experiments • Mendel cross-pollinated two purebred pea plants: QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this pict ure. =He took the pollen from one plant and used it to fertilize another plant, giving him control of fertilization. Crossing Pea Plants • By crossing two purebred pea plants, Mendel was able to study the heredity of certain traits. Heredity= passing of physical characteristics from parent to offspring. Trait= each form of a characteristic. For ex. Characteristic= seed color Traits = yellow, green DIAGRAM of Mendel’s Cross Parent Generation= P = pink purebred crossed with white purebred. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. 1st Filial Generation= F1 = all pink flowers produced ??If parent generation had two separate traits (purple and white), why did the F1 generation have only ONE trait (just purple)? What determines Physical Traits? • GENE: a segment of DNA on a chromosome that determines/controls a physical trait. • ALLELE= different forms of a gene. You get one allele of a gene from each parent. Alleles are represented by a letter. • Physical traits are determined by the DOMINANT alleles= the allele that always shows up in an organism when present. (If there is no dominant allele present, then the recessive allele is expressed.) For Example, in Mendel’s Cross… Physical Characteristic= flower color Trait= purple or white Alleles: purple= dominant because the F1 generation was all purple. white= recessive because it was hidden in F1 generation (none were white). Symbols for Alleles • Capital letters represent dominant alleles. (P= purple) • Lowercase letters represent recessive alleles. (p= white) *As long as one capital letter is present, the physical trait is the dominant form. *Same letter must be used for the same allele. The letter is chosen based on the dominant form. That is why the recessive allele isn’t “w” For Example: The letter “P” represents flower color. PP = purple (inherited dominant alleles from both parents). Pp= purple (inherited one dominant and one recessive, but trait is still purple). This is a hybrid= one of each allele. pp= white (inherited recessive alleles from both parents, and trait is now white). *Look at Allele symbols in the above cross-pollinations. Homozygous & Heterozygous • Homozygous = purebred for a trait. -both alleles are dominant (PP) or -both alleles are recessive (pp) • Heterozygous = hybrid for a trait -alleles are different (Pp) -heterozygous traits take on the dominant form Do you understand… • • • • • • • • • Gregor Mendel Heredity Trait Characteristic Cross-pollination Purebred Gene Allele P generation • • • • • • • F1 Generation Dominant Recessive Symbols for alleles PP Pp (hybrid) pp