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Genetics Gregor Mendel • 1840’s • Austrian Monk • Tended garden, became interested in characteristics of plants • “Father of Genetics” 2 laws of Heredity • 1-Law of segregation • 2-Law of independent assortment Mendel and his Peas • Analyzed 7 characteristics (traits) of pea plants….size, color, seed texture, flowers present, height • Cross-pollinated various traits to view outcome Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Fig. 23Aa Flower Structure stamen anther filament stigma style Ovules in ovary carpel Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cutting away anthers Cross Pollination vs. Self Pollination Fig. 23Ab Brushing on pollen from another plant All peas are yellow when one parent produces yellow seeds and the other parent produces green seeds. What he noticed… • Tall plants mixed with short plants always produced tall plants • However….the offspring of the above plants sometimes produced short plants in the 2nd generation What does this mean? • If a tall plant mixes with a short plant and the offspring are all tall, tall must be a DOMINANT TRAIT and the tall parents must have been PURE BRED Punnet Square • Used to show probability of trait expression when combining 2 parents genes (F1 generation) • T-tall • t-short When offspring self pollinated….why were some short? • The offspring of the self pollinated pea plants produced short plants because they were not TRUE BREEDING (pure bred), they had a recessive short gene hidden. (F2 generation) • T-tall • t-short Allele Gene for a specific trait *Everyone has 2 alleles for a specific trait (1 from mom and 1 from dad) If a pea plant height is Tt, they got one T from one parent and the t from the other parent Dominant and Recessive Alleles • Dominant alleles will be expressed (you will SEE the trait) over the recessive allele • Recessive alleles will be hidden by the dominant allele but will still be a part of the persons genotype (gene combination for a specific trait) • The only way a recessive allele will be expressed is in the absence of a dominant allele or when 2 recessive alleles are present. Vocab for alleles • Homozygous dominant, pure bred dominant, true breeding dominant-ALL mean that the genotype is 2 dominant genes (TT) • Homozygous recessive, pure bred recessive, true bred recessive-ALL mean that the genotype is 2 recessive genes (tt) • Heterozygous-Alleles for a genotype are different, one recessive, one dominant (Tt) *Can also be called HYBRID Genotype and Phenotype • Genotype-gene or allele combination for a specific trait • Phenotype-what characteristic is physically seen from the genotype • Can be expressed in ratios or percentages • Ex- Tt is genotype, Tall is the phenotype Practice Punnets • Round seeds in pea plants are dominant to wrinkled seeds. Self fertilize a heterozygous pea plant. R-round, r-wrinkled • Genotype: • Phenotype: • Purple are dominant flowers in pea plants over white flowers. Cross a homozygous dominant, with a homozygous recessive. • Purple-P, white-p • Genotype: • Phenotype: • Yellow seeds are dominant to green seeds in pea plants. Cross a homozygous recessive with a heterozygous. Y-yellow, y-green • Genotype: • Phenotype: Mendel's Laws • 1-Law of segregation…..Alleles split into each offspring box • 2-Law of independent assortment…..alleles sort out randomly in each offspring box completely independent of other genes (by chance) In humans • • • • • Eye color Ears Widows peak Pinky fingers Interlocking fingers??? (weird) Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Fig. 23.6 one pair S Cell has two pairs of homologues. W Allele Key W = Widow’s peak w = Straight hairline S = Short fingers s = Long fingers s w either S S Ss s W W w w or one pair S Ss s w W w W MEIOSIS I S s s S S s w w W s MEIOSIS II W W S w s S W w W s w S w S w W s w s W W 3 SW sw Sw sW • Is it possible to get a white flowered pea plant from 2 purple flowered plants? Try These!! • Cross a pure bred tall plant with a heterozygous tall plant. List genotypes and phenotypes • Cross a heterozygous round seeded plant with a wrinkled seeded plant. List genotypes and phenotypes Is it possible to do a punnett square using more than one trait? • Try this one….cross a heterozygous purple plant, homozygous tall plant with a homozygous white plant, heterozygous tall plant. List genotypes and phenotypes Co-Dominance Try this one: • Fur color in cats is co-dominant. Cross a Black male with an Orange female. • *When you are done….Cross 2 orange cats… Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Incomplete Dominance Fig. 23.13 A person with straight hair (H1H1) Heterozygous Parents (H1 H2) A person with naturally curly hair (H1H1) ♀ H1 H2 Straight hair Wavy hair Curly hair oocytes ♀ H1 H2 H1 H1 H1 H2 sperm H1 H2 H1 H2 Key H1 H2 H2 H2 Phenotypic Ratio 1 2 1 Offspring (man): © Vol. 88/PhotoDisc; (woman): © Larry Williams/Corbis Try this one: Hair color in mice is incompletely dominant. Cross a Black mouse with a white mouse. Polygenic Number of People Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Skin Color Genetics of Blood Type Try this one: • Cross an O blood male with a Heterozygous A female Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Genes Expressed due to Environmental Factors Fig. 23.18 © Jane Burton/Bruce Coleman, Inc. Discovery of sex linkage P F1 true-breeding red-eye female X true-breeding white-eye male 100% red eye offspring generation (hybrids) F2 generation 100% red-eye female 50% red-eye male 50% white eye male Genes on sex chromosomes • Y chromosome – few genes other than SRY • sex-determining region • master regulator for maleness • turns on genes for production of male hormones • X chromosome – other genes/traits beyond sex determination • mutations: – hemophilia – Duchenne muscular dystrophy – color-blindness Human X chromosome • Sex-linked – usually means “X-linked” – more than 60 diseases traced to genes on X chromosome Duchenne muscular dystrophy Becker muscular dystrophy Chronic granulomatous disease Retinitis pigmentosa-3 Norrie disease Retinitis pigmentosa-2 Ichthyosis, X-linked Placental steroid sulfatase deficiency Kallmann syndrome Chondrodysplasia punctata, X-linked recessive Hypophosphatemia Aicardi syndrome Hypomagnesemia, X-linked Ocular albinism Retinoschisis Adrenal hypoplasia Glycerol kinase deficiency Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency Incontinentia pigmenti Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome Menkes syndrome Androgen insensitivity Sideroblastic anemia Aarskog-Scott syndrome PGK deficiency hemolytic anemia Anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia Agammaglobulinemia Kennedy disease Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease Alport syndrome Fabry disease Immunodeficiency, X-linked, with hyper IgM Lymphoproliferative syndrome Albinism-deafness syndrome Fragile-X syndrome Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy Choroideremia Cleft palate, X-linked Spastic paraplegia, X-linked, uncomplicated Deafness with stapes fixation PRPS-related gout Lowe syndrome Lesch-Nyhan syndrome HPRT-related gout Hunter syndrome Hemophilia B Hemophilia A G6PD deficiency: favism Drug-sensitive anemia Chronic hemolytic anemia Manic-depressive illness, X-linked Colorblindness, (several forms) Dyskeratosis congenita TKCR syndrome Adrenoleukodystrophy Adrenomyeloneuropathy Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy Diabetes insipidus, renal Myotubular myopathy, X-linked Sex Linked Traits • Usually carried on the X – Color blindness – Male pattern baldness (sex-influenced trait) – Hemophilia Hemophilia sex-linked recessive H Xh x X HY HH XHh XH female / eggs male / sperm XH XH Y XHXH XHY XH Xh Xh XH Xh XHXh carrier XhY XHY Y disease Try this one: • Cross a color blind male with a normal female