Download Genotypes

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
DO NOW
1.Take our your vocab HW.
2.Talk to your table – which
characteristics do people
inherit from their parents?
Chapter 3:
“Heredity”
Vocabulary
•Heredity – the passing of traits from
parent to offspring (children).
•Trait – a characteristic of an
organism
• Gregor Mendel (“Father of genetics”)
was the first scientist to study
genetics and how traits are passed
from parents to offspring.
Pea Plants
•
Mendel bred pea
plants and was able
to see that some
traits are passed
down to offspring
and some skip a
generation.
Pollination
• Pea plants are bred
through pollination, which
is the fertilization of
plants that contains both
male & female
reproductive structures.
• Fertilization occurs when
a sperm from the pollen
travels through the stigma
and enters the egg in an
ovule.
Pea Plants Create Offspring By…
1. Self-Pollination: pollen (male part) from
one flower can fertilize the ovule (female
part) of the SAME flower.
Pea Plants Create Offspring By…
2. Cross-Pollination: pollen (male parts) from
one plant can fertilizes the ovule (female
parts) of a flower on a DIFFERENT plant.
Why Mendel used pea plants:
1.
Grow & reproduce quickly.
2.
Easy self- pollination &
cross-pollination
3.
Many observable traits.
4.
Traits are easily observed
Examples: seed shape,
flower color & plant height
T
R
A
I
T
S
Breeding Pea Plants
•
Mendel bred one characteristic at a time.
•
He used true-breeding plants, in which all of
the offspring will have the same trait as the
parent.
–
Example: Purple flowers have purple offspring
and white flowers have white offspring.
Mendel’s First Experiment
•
He used cross-pollination for two true-bred
plants with different traits
•
He took a true-bred purple pea plant & crosspollinated it with a true-bred white pea plant.
RESULTS
All pea plants came
back purple!
Mendel’s Conclusions
•
He found that one trait always showed up and the
other trait disappeared.
•
He called them:
1.
Dominant– The trait that always appears (purple).
Shown as an upper case letter -“P”
2. Recessive - The trait that always disappears
(white). Shown as a lower case letter “p” )
Mendel’s Second Experiment
•
Mendel allowed each offspring plant from the
first experiment cross to self-pollinate.
•
Results – Some came back dominant (purple)
and some came back recessive (white).
Simple Dominance
Mendel’s experiment was an example of
simple dominance.
• Simple Dominance – When one trait is
completely dominant to the other.
– Example: Red and white flowers that are
crossed only produce either red or white
flowers.
• They will NEVER produce pink flowers.
Generations
• The true-breeding cross is called the
P or parental generation.
• The offspring of a cross-pollination
are called the F1 or first generation.
• The offspring from a F1 cross is
called the F2 or second generation.
Ratios
•
Mendel created a ratio of dominant to recessive
traits to determine the reason for the results.
•
Each parent donates genes to their children, so each
offspring has two forms of genes called alleles.
(Ex. “AA”, “Aa”, “aa”)
Genes Can Be:
Heterozygous (Hybrid)- One dominant & one recessive
trait (Aa, Bb, Cc, Dd, etc.)
Homozygous – Both dominant or both recessive traits
•
•
Homozygous Dominant = AA
Homozygous Recessive = aa
“P (Parental) Cross”
True-Bred Short
X
True-Bred Long
Resulted in 100% long offspring (F1)
“F1 (First Generation) Cross”
Cross pollinated 2 of the long offspring
produced in the “P” generation
F1 long X F1 long
Results:
75% long and 25% short
EXAMPLES
• R= dominant gene for red
• r= recessive gene that appears white
• RR=homozygous dominant, red
• rr=homozygous recessive, white
• Rr=heterozygous, red
•
Genotype - the actual letters (alleles)
that represent genes.
•
•
Example: GG, Gg, or gg
Phenotype - The physical appearance of
those genes.
•
Ex: Green or Yellow Peas
PUNNETT
SQUARES
Punnett Squares
• Punnett Squares –a model used to
represent crosses between organisms.
Example: What are the possible
offspring of a cross between a
homozygous dominant green plant and a
homozygous recessive green plant?
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step #1: Identify the alleles
Example: What are the possible offspring of a
cross between a homozygous dominant green
plant and a homozygous recessive green plant?
Homozygous dominant = GG parent
Homozygous recessive = gg parent
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step #2: Draw a square with 4 boxes
Example: What are the possible offspring of a
cross between a homozygous dominant green
plant and a homozygous recessive green plant?
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step # 3: Put the alleles from one parent on
the top of the box & the alleles from the
other parent on the side of the box
gg parent
G
g
g
GG parent
G
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step # 4: Cross multiply to find the
genotypes of the children
G
g
g
Gg
G
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step # 4: Cross multiply to find the
genotypes of the children
G
G
Gg
Gg
Gg
Gg
g
g
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step # 5: Write the phenotypes of each
child in the boxes
g
g
G
G
Gg
Gg
Green
Green
Gg
Gg
Green
Green
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step # 6: Calculate genotypic and
phenotypic ratios of the offspring
g
g
G
G
Gg
Gg
Green
Green
Gg
Gg
Green
Green
List all Genotypes:
GG
Gg
gg
List all Phenotypes:
green
yellow
Steps in doing a Punnett Square:
Step # 6: Calculate genotypic and
phenotypic ratios of the offspring
g
g
G
G
Gg
Gg
Green
Green
Gg
Gg
Green
Green
Count how many
Genotypes:
GG = 0/4
Gg = 4/4
gg = 0/4
of each:
= 0%
= 100%
= 0%
Phenotypes:
green = 4/4 = 100%
yellow = 0/4 = 0%
Now try this one…
What are the possible offspring of a cross
between a pea plant which is heterozygous
for green peas and a pea plant which is
homozygous recessive for green peas?
g
g
G
g
Gg
gg
Green
yellow
Gg
gg
Green
yellow
Count how many
Genotypes:
GG = 0/4
Gg = 2/4
gg = 2/4
of each:
= 0%
= 50%
= 50%
Phenotypes:
green = 2/4 = 50%
yellow = 2/4 = 50%
Another example…
What are the possible offspring of a
cross between 2 pea plants which are
both heterozygous for green peas?
G
G
g
GG
Green
g
Gg
Green
Gg
gg
Green
yellow
Count how many
Genotypes:
GG = 1/4
Gg = 2/4
gg = 1/4
of each:
= 25%
= 50%
= 25%
Phenotypes:
green = 3/4 = 75%
yellow = 1/4 = 25%
INCOMPLETE
DOMINANCE
Incomplete Dominance
• Sometimes there are two dominant alleles and
no recessive alleles.
• This means that one trait is not completely
dominant over the other. Both are dominant!
– Ex: flower color
In some flowers, red & white are both dominant.
A red flower has the
RED
phenotype ______
and the genotype RR .
A white flower has
the phenotype
WHITE and the
______
genotype WW .
What if you cross a RED (RR) flower
with a WHITE (WW) flower?
W
R
R
RW
RW
RW
RW
What color are the offspring?
R
R
W
RW
RW
W
RW
RW
WHITE
+
RED
PINK
What is the
phenotype of
this flower?
PINK
What is the
genotype of this
flower?
RW
What Are The Genotypes & Phenotypes?
R
W
W
R
Genotypes
RW
RW
Pink
Pink
0%
•RR
=
•WW =
0%
•RW = 100%
RW
RW
Phenotypes
Pink
Pink
•Red
=
0%
•White = 0%
•Pink = 100%
So, when a trait is inherited by
incomplete dominance, there are
3
____
possible phenotypes
Red
White
Pink
3 possible genotypes.
and ____
RR
WW
RW
Practice
• Red and White flowers are incompletely
dominant. Cross a pink flower and a
white flower
Genotypes
W
W
R
W
RW
pink
WW
white
RW
WW
pink
white
•RR
= 0%
•WW = 50%
•RW = 50%
Phenotypes
•Red
= 0%
•White = 50%
•Pink
= 50%
Practice
• Red and White flowers are incompletely
dominant. Cross a pink flower and a pink
flower
Genotypes
Phenotypes
More Practice
Genotypes
Phenotypes
Multiple Alleles
Sometimes, there are more than 2 possibilities.
There are any set of 3 or more alleles.
Examples:
–
hair color, eye color, skin color
Co dominance
• Co dominance - When 2 alleles are equally
dominant.
– Example: Blood Type
Genotype
• 2 Dominant alleles – A & B AA
AO
• 1 recessive allele – O
BB
BO
AB
OO
Phenotype
A
A
B
B
AB
O
HOMOGYGOUS VS. HETEROZYGOUS
HOMOZYGOUS
DOMINANT
HOMOZYGOUS
RECESSIVE
HETEROZYGOUS
CO
DOMINANT
AA
OO
AO
AB
BB
BO
What if you cross a AO parent with
a BO parent?
B
O
A
O
AB
BO
AO
OO
Genotypes
•AB = 25%
•BO = 25%
•AO = 25%
•OO = 25%
Phenotypes
•AB = 25%
•A
= 25%
•B
= 25%
•O = 25%
You get all possible blood types in the offspring!
Practice
What if you cross a AB
parent with a O parent?
Exit Slip
• In your own words
explain what incomplete
dominance is…
Related documents