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Biology Gregor Mendel & Genetics Who is Gregor Mendel? An Austrian monk who loved to garden Through study and breeding of pea plants he unlocked mysteries of heredity What is heredity? http://content.answers.com/main/content/img/webpics/gregor_mendel.jpg Pea Plants Have 7 different traits Traits are found on genes—genes are separated into alleles Example: Height gene has 2 alleles: short & tall Seed color gene has 2 alleles: yellow & green Rules of Heredity The Rule of Dominance: one allele is dominant to the other recessive allele Dominant trait will not allow recessive trait to be displayed Example: height—tall (T) is dominant to short (t) Dominant alleles capitalized Recessive alleles lower case Rules of Heredity The Law of Segregation: the alleles for the same gene are separate and are inherited independantly of each other Example: T T Gene for height with 2 alleles t t During meiosis, 1 allele can go With one gamete, the other goes to a second gamete How did he figure all this out? True-breeding and cross-breeding Phenotype: the trait that is displayed—what you see Genotype: the gene combination that displays the phenotype Homozygous: 2 alleles for same gene are identical Example: TT or tt Heterozygous: 2 alleles for same gene are different Example: Tt Examples TT is a homozygous genotype for height Phenotype: tall Tt is the heterozygous genotype for height Phenotype: tall tt is a homozygous gentoype for height Phenotype: short Breeding Definitions P1: parent generation F1: 1st generation son or daughter F2: 2nd generation son or daughter Monohybrid Cross: breeding 1 trait only Dihybrid Cross: breeding 2 traits at same time Monohybrid Cross Mendel cross pollinated 2 plants: (P1) 1 short X 1 tall = (F1) all tall Then crossed all tall F1 generation (F1) 1 tall X 1 tall = (F2) 3 tall and 1 short A phenotypic ratio of 3:1 This led to his Rule of Dominance Dihybrid Cross 2 traits: shape of seeds, color of seeds (P1) 1 round/yellow seed X 1 wrinkled/green = (F1) all round/yellow Then crossed all round/yellow F1 generation (F1) 1 round/yellow X 1 round/yellow = (F2) 9 round/yellow, 3 round/green, 3 wrinkled/yellow, 1 wrinkled/green A 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio This led to the Law of Segregation LET’S PRACTICE! PUNNETT SQUARES Genetics Outside The Box Not all traits follow a simple dominance vs. recessive rule For Example: 1. Codominance 2. 3. 4. 5. Blood types Incomplete Dominance Multiple Alleles Polygenic Traits Sex-linked Genes Codominance Both alleles contribute to the phenotype No blending of phenotypic traits—both traits are displayed For Example: White Chicken (WW) X Black Chicken (BB) Results in a Black AND White chicken (WB) http://static.rcgroups.com/forums/attachments/3/3/0/3/6/951792.thumb?qTu6oJVgL7ucL7gyoy3lYzcjMmf0AGR8BGV Codominance: blood types There are 4 human blood groups: A, B, AB, O The alleles that code for these types are: IA, IB, i Rh Factor is a single gene with 2 alleles (+) is dominant, (-) is recessive Codominance: blood types Phenotype Genotype Antigen on RBC Transfuse to Transfuse from A IA IA or IA i A A, AB A, O B IB IB or IB i B B, AB B, O AB IA IB A&B AB O ii NONE A, B, AB, O A, B, AB, O O Codominance: blood types AB = Universal Recipient Can receive from everyone O = Universal Donor Can donate to everyone Rh factor example: AB (+) means you are positive for the Rh allele, either homozygous or heterozygous AB(–) means you are negative for the allele, homozygous recessive Incomplete Dominance No allele is dominant over another Heterozygous phenotype is a blending of the 2 homozygous phenotypes For Example: Four O’Clock Flowers Red (RR) X White (WW) Results in pink flowers (RW) http://thumbs.ebaystatic.com/pict/7725948498_2.jpg Multiple Alleles Genes that have more than 2 alleles Does not occur in one person, but throughout a population For Example: Rabbits hair color Full, chinchilla, himalayan or albino http://rabbit-world.main.jp/rabbitshurui-shop/himalayan_1.jpg Polygenic Traits Traits controlled by two or more genes Genes may be on the same or different chromosomes Has a wide range of phenotypes For Example: human skin color Sex-Linked Genes Sex always determined by Dad To be a girl you must have XX chromosomes To be a boy, you must have XY chromosomes Mom will always give an X, the second chromosome is determined by Dad Karyotype: picture of grouped chromosomes Sex-Linked Genes Genes located on an X or Y chromosome only The X chromosome is bigger, therefore it holds more genes Because males only have 1 X chromosome, even recessive disorders are expressed in men Examples: color-blindness, hemophilia, Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Common Genetic Disorders Chromosomal Disorders Down Syndrome Codominant Disorders Sickle cell anemia Dominant Disorders Huntingtons’s Disease Recessive Disorders: Albinism Cystic fibrosis PKU Tay-sachs disease Trisomy 21: Down Syndrome