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Chapter 10: Patterns of Inheritance Thinking Time!!!!!!!!! • Why is it, in some cases, that two brown-eyed parents have all brown-eyed children, and in other cases two brown-eyed parents have some brown-eyed children and some blue-eyed children? • What do you think would be the result of a cross between a red flower and a white flower? Cracking the code of life 1. The Blending Hypothesis: – Predicts that offspring appearances will be blends of the phenotypes of their parents. + red white all pink 2. The Particulate Hypothesis (Mendel): – – One copy of each factor is inherited from each parent. The factors remain intact and do not physically blend together. + red white + red white Genetic Vocabulary: • Trait: Variation of a particular character. – Ex: eye color is a character, while traits • Hybrids: The offspring of 2 different true-breeding species. + mule • Monohybrid cross: a pairing in which the parents differ in only one (mono) character. – Ex: Flower color P generation: Parent plants F1 generation: The hybrid offspring F2 generation: When F1 plants self-fertilize or fertilize each other, their offspring makes up the F2 generation. Terms need to know: • Allele: The different forms of genes. – Organisms have two alleles for each trait, one from each parent. • Dominant: appear to hide other traits. – capital letters ABCDEFGH • Recessive: can be hidden in one generation and then appear in the next. – lower-caser letters abcdefgh • Phenotype - the way an organisms’ genes express themselves (physical type, description) – either short, tall, purple, white, & etc • Genotype - the gene type of an organism (genes, letters) – TT, Tt, tt Homozygous vs. Heterozygous In pea plants, is dominant over • Homozygous - 2 alleles are the same. – homozygous dominant • 2 dominant genes : PP – homozygous recessive • 2 recessive genes : pp • Heterozygous – 2 alleles are different. – 1 dominant gene and 1 recessive gene: Pp. Gregor Mendel • Often called the "Father of Genetics” • Performed many experiments with plants, mostly garden peas. • His 1st step: identify true-breeding plant. • 2nd step: He crossed true-breeding plants that had two distinct traits. ? Mendel’s First Experiment: ¾ of plants are purple ¼ of plants are white Mendel’s Results: • He examined the inheritance patterns of 7 different pea-plant characters. • For each character, one of the two parent traits disappeared in the F1, but reappeared in ¼ of the F2 generation. The Testcross: • It is not possible to predict the genotype of an organism with a dominant phenotype. • It could be homozygous dominant PP or heterozygous Pp. • A test cross can determine the identity of the unknown allele. Writing Genotypes from phenotypes: For Height: tall (T) is dominant and short (t) is recessive. • 1. homozygous dominant for height – Answer: TT • 2. heterozygous for height – Answer: Tt • 3. homozygous tall – Answer: TT • 4. recessive for height – Answer: tt • 5. heterozygous tall – Answer: Tt Writing phenotypes from genotypes: For Height: tall (T) is dominant and short (t) is recessive. For Flower color: red (R) is dominant and white (r) is recessive. • 6. TT – Answer: homozygous dominant, tall • 7. tt – Answer: homozygous recessive, short • 8. Tt – Answer: heterozygous, tall • 9. Rr – Answer: heterozygous, red • 10. rr – Answer: homozygous recessive, white Activity Time: The Coin Activity • When tossing one penny, what is the probability of getting one head? • When tossing one penny, what is the probability of getting one tail? When tossing two pennies, what is the probability of getting one head and one tail? Punnett Squares • It shows the possible outcomes for the Phenotypes of the individual. Predicting Genotypes & Phenotypes • In pea plants, is dominant over Tall • Cross: homozygous tall Short X homozygous short Step 1: • Write down the genotypes of each parent – ABCDEFGH dominant traits – abcdefgh recessive traits • Homozygous tall: • Homozygous short: TT tt Step 2: • Draw a Punnett square • Write the gametes of one parent across the top and the other parent along the side T t t T Step 3: • Fill in each box of the Punnett square – Capital letter goes 1st T T t Tt Tt t Tt Tt Step 4: • List the possible genotypes and phenotypes of the offspring. • Possible genotypes: Tt • Possible phenotypes: Tall Results Parent 1: Parent 2: T T Tt Tt t t Tt Tt Results • Each of the offspring has a ____ 4 /4 or _____% 100 chance of showing ______ Tt genotype. • Since T (tall) is dominant over t (short). Therefore, each of the offspring has a ____/4 or _____% 4 100 chance of being __________. tall Practice Time: Key: brown eyes (B) is dominant, blue eyes (b) is recessive is dominant over Homozygous dominant X Heterozygous • Genotypes: BB & Bb B b B B BB BB Bb Bb Questions: 1. Phenotype of offspring? all brown 2. Genotype of offspring? BB & Bb 3. Phenotypic ratio: 4 brown: 0 blue 4. Genotypic ratio: 2 BB: 2Bb Your Turn In humans, is dominant over Questions: 1. 2. 3. 4. Phenotype of offspring? brown & blue Genotype of offspring? BB, Bb & bb Phenotypic ratio: 1 BB: 2 Bb: 1 bb Genotypic ratio: 3 Brown: 1 blue heterozygous brown X heterozygous brown Dihybrid Cross • In one dihybrid cross experiment, Mendel studied the inheritance of seed color and seed shape. is dominant over Yellow (Y) green (y) is dominant over Round (R) wrinkled (r) Dihybrid cross: • Mendel crossed true-breeding plants that had yellow, round seeds (YYRR) with true-breeding plants that has green, wrinkled seeds (yyrr). • The first parent could only produce RY gametes. The other could only produce ry gametes. • The union of these gametes results in RrYy. Dihybrid Cross: • Four classes of gametes (YR, Yr, yR, and yr) are produced in equal amounts. • Which results in 16 equally probable ways in which the alleles can combine in the F2 generation. Phenotypic ratio - 9:3:3:1 • Intermediate Inheritance: • In Mendel’s pea crosses, the F1 offspring always looked like the dominant homozygous parent. – Because the recessive phenotype required two recessive alleles. YY yellow Yy yellow yy green – But, for some characters of organisms, neither allele is dominant intermediate inheritance. Dominant Intermediate Inheritance: • Heterozygous F1 generation hybrids do not show the phenotype of the dominant allele or the recessive allele but somewhere in between. – For example, in a particular breed of chickens called Andalusians, black and white offspring produce blue F1 hybrid offspring. – Because neither the black nor white is dominant, capital or lower case letters are not used. – Instead a C for color is paired with a superscript B for black or W for white. B B W W B W C C C C C C black white blue X B B W C C W C C The predicted phenotypes in F2 are 1 black: 2 blue: 1 white B W C C B B C C B W C C B W C C W W C C Multiple Alleles: • Codominant: both alleles are expressed • The gene for human blood type expresses four phenotypes: – A, B, AB or O. • The alleles IA and IB are codominant and the i allele is recessive to both. Phenotypes (Blood type) Genotypes A IAIA or IAi B IBIB or IBi AB IAIB O ii • The letters refer to two carbohydrates, designated A and B, which are found on the surface of red blood cells. FYI: • Type O-negative blood does not have any antigens. It is called the "universal donor" type because it is compatible with any blood type. • Type AB-positive blood is called the "universal recipient" type because a person who has it can receive blood of any type. Polygenic inheritance • When a single phenotype results from the expression of two or more genes. • For instance, phenotypes like high blood pressure are not the result of a single "blood pressure" gene with many alleles. • The phenotype is an interaction between a person's weight, cholesterol level, kidney function, smoking, and probably lots of others too. The Importance of Environment • An individual’s phenotype depends on environment as well as genes. • In human, nutrition influences height, exercise affects build, and exposure to sunlight darkens skin. • The product of a genotype is generally not a single defined phenotype, but a range of possibilities influenced by the environment. Chromosome Theory of Inheritance: • It states that: – Genes are located on chromosomes. – Homologous Chromosomes separate during meiosis so that alleles are segregated. – Chromosomes under go segregation and independent assortment during meiosis. Mendel’s Law of Genetics: 1. Alleles are different forms of the same gene that segregate during gamete formation (Law of Segregation) 2. Alleles of different genes segregate independently (Law of independent assortment) Sex-linked Genes • Located on a sex chromosome • In humans, most sex-linked genes are found on the X chromosome, which is much larger than the Y chromosome. • Discovered by Thomas Hunt Morgan. P: Morgan mated a white-eyed male fly with a red-eyed female fly. r X R X Y R r X X female R X Y male F1: R X R r X X female R X Y male All the F1 offspring had red eyes. X F1: R r X X X Y female male R R X R X F2: r X Then, he bred the F1 offspring together. Y R R X X female R r X X female R X Y male r XY male He got the classical 3:1 phenotypic ratio. However, none of the flies with white eyes were female. He concluded that the gene involved is only on the X chromosome. Are you colorblind????? Are you colorblind????? Are you colorblind?????