* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Genetics - TeacherWeb
Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of diabetes Type 2 wikipedia , lookup
Transposable element wikipedia , lookup
Long non-coding RNA wikipedia , lookup
Gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Oncogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Heritability of IQ wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of neurodegenerative diseases wikipedia , lookup
Genetically modified crops wikipedia , lookup
X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer wikipedia , lookup
Gene nomenclature wikipedia , lookup
Public health genomics wikipedia , lookup
Pathogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Gene desert wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Essential gene wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
Dominance (genetics) wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Ridge (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Genomic imprinting wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Genetics Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) Mendel’s Experiments • Crossed tall pea plants with short (dwarf) ones • Crossed yellow seeded plants with green seeded ones • Crossed inflated pods with constricted pods • Crossed terminal flowers with axial flowers From these experiments… • Mendel discovered dominant and recessive genes Mendel also… • Crossed the offspring from the original experiments • For example, he crossed the two tall offspring (they had one tall parent and one short parent) • The third generation had 787 tall offspring and 277 short ones • That’s a ratio of 3 tall:1 short • He also crossed 2 of the offspring of the yellow X green cross • The third generation had 6,022 yellow offspring to 2,001 green offspring; that’s a ratio of 3:1 Mendel discovered… • The Principle of Segregation – genes occur in pairs and the members of the pair segregate during gamete formation Mendel Also... • Studied crosses between pea plants that differed in two characteristics • For example, one parent had round yellow peas and one parent had wrinkled green peas Do round and yellow always have to be inherited together? • Mendel obtain yellow round ones, wrinkled green ones, yellow wrinkled ones, and round green ones. Mendel Discovered... • Principle of Independent Assortment – traits are not inherited together Today… • We use the terms homozygous and heterozygous Homozygous • “homo” means the same • Genes in a pair are homozygous if they’re the same • For example, two genes for tall or two genes for short Heterozygous • “hetero” means different • Genes are heterozygous if the genes in the pair are different • For example, one purple flowered gene and one white flowered gene Mendel used… • Letters to represent genes and we still do today • For example, we can use the letter “P” for purple flowers or “T” for tall plants So… • Two tall genes can be written “TT” – that’s homozygous • One tall gene and one short gene can be written “Tt” – that’s heterozygous Questions • What would this gene pair be (homozygous or heterozygous)? •RR • What would this gene pair be? •Ss Two More Genetics Terms to Know • Phenotype – physical trait (purple flowers, tall plants, yellow peas, etc.) • Genotype – kinds of genes in the pair (PP, Pp, or pp) also (homozygous dominant, heterozygous, homozygous recessive) In Review… • Genes can be dominant or recessive – dominant genes can hide recessive genes • If a gene pair is RR, the “R” trait shows up • If a gene pair is Rr, the “R” trait shows up • If a gene pair is rr, the “r” trait shows up A human example… • Free or attached ear lobes •Free ear lobes are dominant •Attached ear lobes are recessive • A person with two dominant genes (EE) or one dominant and one recessive (Ee) will have free ear lobes • A person with attached ear lobes has two genes for attached lobes (ee) Another human example • Hitchhiker’s Thumb • Having a hitchhiker’s thumb is recessive • Not having a hitchhiker’s thumb is dominant