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Patterns of Inheritance Chapter 13 Mendel and his principles Gregor Mendel The Father of Genetics It was not until the midnineteenth century that Gregor Mendel, an Austrian monk, carried out important studies of heredity—the passing on of characteristics from parents to offspring. Why he succeeded. Mendel was the first person to succeed in predicting how traits are transferred from one generation to the next. Characteristics that are inherited are called traits. A complete explanation requires the careful study of genetics—the branch of biology that studies heredity Mendel’s Experiment Mendel chose to use garden peas in his experiments because they possessed 7 characteristics. Each characteristic occurred in 2 contrasting traits Garden pea plants reproduce sexually, and produce male and female sex cells, called gametes The 7 Characteristics Mendel studied 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Plant height: long vs short Flower position along stem: axial & terminal Pod appearance: inflated vs constricted Pod color: green vs yellow Seed texture: round vs wrinkled Seed color: yellow vs green Flower color: purple vs white Why did he choose the Garden Pea? Mendel was able to observe how traits were passed from 1 generation to the next by controlling how pea plants were pollinated Pollination is the transfer of pollen grains from a male (anther), to a female (stigma) reproductive organ in a plant Types of Pollination Self-pollination: occurs when pollen is transferred from the anthers of a flower to the stigma of either that flower or another flower on the same plant Cross-pollination: occurs between flowers of 2 plants. Also can be done manually Fertilization The male gamete forms in the pollen grain, which is produced in the male reproductive organ & the female gamete forms in the female reproductive organs. This process is called fertilization and the result is a fertilized seed called a zygote which forms into a seed. Mendel’s experiment He initially studied each characteristic & its contrasting traits. He grew plants that were true-breeding (pure) for each trait and allowed them to self-pollinate Mendel opened the petals of a flower and removed the male organs. He then dusted the female organ with pollen from the plant he wished to cross it with by cross-pollination By using this technique, Mendel could be sure of the parents in his cross Pollen grains Transfer pollen Male Female parts part Cross-pollination Mendel was a careful researcher He studied only one trait at a time to control variables, and he analyzed his data mathematically. The tall pea plants he worked with were from populations of plants that had been tall for many generations and had always produced tall offspring. Such plants are said to be true breeding for tallness. Likewise, the short plants he worked with were true breeding for shortness Mendel’s Monohybrid Crosses A hybrid is the offspring of parents that have different forms of a trait, such as tall and short height. Mendel’s first experiments are called monohybrid crosses because mono means “one” and the two parent plants differed from each other by a single trait—height. The First Generation - F1 Mendel selected a six-foot-tall pea plant (Parent Plants or P1) that came from a population of pea plants, all of which were over six feet tall. He cross-pollinated this tall pea plant with pollen from a short pea plant (Parent Plants or P1). All of the offspring grew to be as tall as the taller parent. The Second Generation F2 Mendel allowed the tall plants in this first generation to self-pollinate. After the seeds formed, he planted them and counted more than 1000 plants in this second generation. Three-fourths of the plants were as tall as the tall plants in the parent and first generations. The Second Generation One-fourth of the offspring were as short as the short plants in the parent generation. In the second generation, tall and short plants occurred in a ratio of about three tall plants to one short plant. P1 generation: True-breeding Parents F1 generation: 1st Offspring Two F1 plants: F2 generation P1 Short pea plant Tall pea plant F1 All tall pea plants F2 3 tall: 1 short Mendel’s Rules of Heredity Mendel Rules of Heredity The rule of unit factor: Mendel concluded that each organism has two factors that control each of its traits. These factors are genes and that they are located on chromosomes in alternative forms. We call these different gene forms alleles An organism’s two alleles are located on different copies of a chromosome—one inherited from the female parent and one from the male parent Mendel Rule of Heredity The Rule of Dominance: •Mendel called the observed traits as dominant and the disappeared traits as recessive •Tall plants are dominant (Uppercase letters) and short plants are recessive (lowercase letters). •The dominant allele is always written first Short plant Tall plant t T T t t T F1 All tall plants T t Dominant & Recessive Traits Seed Seed shape color Flower color Flower position Pod color Pod shape Plant height purple axial (side) green inflated tall white terminal (tips) yellow constricted short Dominant trait round yellow Recessive trait wrinkled green Mendel 1st Law of Heredity The Law of Segregation: •The law of segregation states that every individual has two alleles of each gene and when gametes are produced, each gamete receives one of these alleles. • During fertilization, these gametes randomly pair to produce four combinations of alleles •The way an organism looks and behaves is called its phenotype •The allele combination an organism contains is known as its genotype •An organism’s genotype can’t always be known by its phenotype Homozygous vs Heterozygous Homozygous: An organism is homozygous for a trait if its two alleles for the trait are the same TT or tt would be the only possibilities Heterozygous: An organism is heterozygous for a trait if its two alleles for the trait differ from each other Tt Genotype & Phenotype Genotype refers to “gene type” and describes the possible gene combinations. ¼ TT, 2/4 Tt, ¼ tt Phenotype refers to “gene expression” and describes in words the gene combinations ¾ Tall plants ¼ Short plants Law of Segregation Tt ´ Tt cross F1 Tall plant Tall plant T T t t F2 Tall Tall T T T Tall t 3 T Short t t t 1 Two organisms can look alike but have different underlying allele combinations. Genotype: G=1/4 TT, 2/4 Tt, 1/4tt Phenotype: P=3/4 Tall, ¼ Short Mendel 2nd Law of Heredity The Law of Independent Assortment: Mendel’s second law states that genes for different traits—for example, seed shape and seed color—are inherited independently of each other Punnett Square In 1905, Reginald Punnett, an English biologist, devised a shorthand way of finding the expected proportions of possible genotypes in the offspring of a cross called the Punnett Square If you know the genotypes of the parents, you can use a Punnett square to predict the possible genotypes of their offspring. Monohybrid crosses Heterozygous tall parent T t T t Tt T T TT Tt t t Tt Tt tt tt A Punnett square for this cross is two boxes tall and two boxes wide because each parent can produce two kinds of gametes for this trait. P Gametes p P Gametes p P p P p pp P P p P Pp p pp p P p P Pp P PP Pp p Pp pp p Pp pp Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. White (pp) Purple (Pp) Gametes p p P Gametes Gametes p P P Pp Pp Gametes p P Purple (PP) Pp Pp F1 generation Purple (Pp) PP Pp Pp pp F2 generation Simple Recessive Heredity Most genetic disorders are caused by recessive alleles 1. Cystic Fibrosis Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a fairly common genetic disorder among white Americans About 1 in 28 white Americans carries the recessive allele, & 1 in 2500 children born to white Americans inherits the disorder. Due to a defective protein in the plasma membrane, cystic fibrosis results in the formation and accumulation of thick mucus in the lungs and digestive tract 2. Tay Sachs Disease Tay-Sachs (tay saks) disease is a recessive disorder of the central nervous system among the Jewish people in the U.S. & eastern European descent A recessive allele results in the absence of an enzyme that normally breaks down a lipid produced and stored in tissues of the central nervous system Because this lipid fails to break down properly, it accumulates in the cells 3. PKU Phenylketonuria (fen ul kee tun YOO ree uh), also called (PKU), is a recessive disorder that results from the absence of an enzyme that converts one amino acid, phenylalanine, to a different amino acid, tyrosine. Because phenylalanine cannot be broken down, it and its by-products accumulate in the body and result in severe damage to the central nervous system Phenylketonuria A PKU test is normally performed on all infants a few days after birth Infants affected by PKU are given a diet that is low in phenylalanine until their brains are fully developed Phenylketonurics: Contains Phenylalanine Simple Dominant Many traits are inherited just as the rule of dominance predicts Remember that in Mendelian inheritance, a single dominant allele inherited from one parent is all that is needed for a person to show the dominant trait A cleft chin Widow’s peak hairline Hitchhiker’s thumb Almond shaped eyes Thick lips Presence of hair on the middle section of your fingers Huntington’s Disease Huntington’s disease is a lethal genetic disorder caused by a rare dominant allele Is progressive, degenerative disease that results in a breakdown of certain areas of the brain the onset of Huntington’s disease usually occurs between the ages of 30 and 50, an individual may already have had children before knowing whether he or she is affected. Famous person with Huntington's disease folk singer Woody Guthrie Dihybrid Test Crosses Using more than one set of variables to determine genetics Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses Mendel performed another set of crosses in which he used peas that differed from each other in two traits rather than only one. Such a cross involving two different traits is called a dihybrid cross. The First Generation Mendel took true-breeding pea plants that had round yellow seeds (RRYY) and crossed them with truebreeding pea plants that had wrinkled green seeds (rryy). He already knew the round-seeded trait was dominant to the wrinkled-seeded trait. He also knew that yellow was dominant to green. Gametes from RrYy parent RY Ry rY ry RRYY RRYy RrYY RrYy RRYy RRYy RrYy Rryy RrYY RrYy rrYY rrYy RrYy Rryy rrYy rryy Dihybrid Cross Ry rY ry Gametes from RrYy parent RY A Punnett square for a dihybrid cross will need to be four boxes on each side for a total of 16 boxes. The first generation round yellow x wrinkled green Dihybrid Cross P1 Wrinkled green Round yellow All round yellow F1 9 3 3 1 F2 Round yellow Round green Ratio: 9:3:3:1 Wrinkled yellow Wrinkled green Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. P generation Round, yellow Wrinkled, green (RRYY) (rryy) Meiosis Meiosis Round, yellow crossed with wrinkled, green X Fertilization (RY) (ry) on F1 generation All round, yellow (RrYy) Meiosis (chromosomes assort independently into four types of gametes) (RY) (Ry) RY Ry RY Ry rY ry (rY) rY ry (ry) F2 generation 9/16 round, yellow 3/16 round, green 3/16 wrinkled, yellow 1/16 wrinkled, green RRYY RRYy RrYY RrYy RRYy RRyy RrYy Rryy RrYY RrYy rrYY rrYy RrYy Rryy rrYy rryy INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE BLENDING INHERITANCE TRAIT IN WHICH ONE GENE IS NOT DOMINANT OVER THE OTHER AND THE HETEROZYGOTE IS A BLEND EXAMPLE: JAPANESE FOUR O’CLOCKS; RED AND WHITE MAKE PINK Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Eggs CR CRCR CW CR Sperm CRCR CRCW CRCW C WC W CW F1 generation All CRCW C WC W F2 generation 1:2:1 CRCR:CRCW:CWCW CODOMINANCE ONE GENE IS NOT DOMINANT OVER THE OTHER AND THE HETEROZYGOTE EXHIBITS BOTH FORMS OF THE GENE EXAMPLE: A black chicken crossed with a white chicken results in a checkered chicken (black & white feathers) Sex-Linked Inheritance The pattern of sex-linked inheritance is explained by the fact that males, who are XY, pass an X chromosome to each daughter and a Y chromosome to each son Two traits that are governed by X-linked recessive inheritance in humans are 1. red-green color blindness 2. Hemophilia 3. Muscular Distrophy Hemophilia Hemophilia A is an X-linked disorder that causes a problem with blood clotting. About one male in every 10 000 has hemophilia, but only about one in 100 million females inherits the same disorder Males inherit the allele on the X chromosome from their carrier mothers. One recessive allele for hemophilia will cause the disorder in males Females would need two recessive alleles to inherit hemophilia Red-Green Color Blindness People who have red-green color blindness can’t differentiate these two colors. Color blindness is caused by the inheritance of a recessive allele at either of two gene sites on the X chromosome. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Y chromosome X chromosome with X chromosome with red-eye gene white-eye gene Parents Male Female F1 generation Male Female F2 generation Males Females Epistasis: Interactions among two or more gene pairs. For example, 2 alleles of one gene can mask alleles of another, and some expected phenotypes may not occur Example: Fur color in labs or rats Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. X White (AAbb) White (aaBB) F1 generation All purple (AaBb) Eggs AB Ab aB ab AB AABB AABb AaBB AaBb Ab AABb AAbb AaBb Aabb Sperm aB AaBB AaBb aaBB aaBb ab AaBb Aabb aaBb aabb F2 generation 9/16 purple 7/16 white Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. ee No dark pigment in fur E_ Dark pigment in fur Yellow Lab E_bb eebb eeB_ Yellow fur; Yellow fur; brown nose, black nose, lips, eye rims lips, eye rims E_B_ Chocolate Lab Black Lab Brown fur, nose, lips, eye rims Black fur, nose, lips, eye rims Pedigree A pedigree is a graphic representation of genetic inheritance It is a diagram made up of a set of symbols that identify males and females, individuals affected by the trait being studied, and family relationships Male Parents Female Siblings Affected Known male heterozygotes for recessive Affected allele female Mating Death Males: Square Females: Circle A horizontal line connecting a circle and a square indicates that the individuals are parents, and a vertical line connects parents with their offspring. Each row shows a generation with most recent at the bottom A half-shaded circle or square represents a carrier, a heterozygous individual. Generation Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. George III Louis I Grand Duke of HesseI Edward Duke of Kent Queen Victoria Prince Albert I II Frederick Victoria III III No hemophilia German Royal House King Edward VII Alice Duke of Hesse Alfred King George V Czar Nicholas II IV Duke of King Windsor George VI Earl of Waldemar Prince Henry Sigismond Mountbatten V Prince Philip Margaret VI Princess Diana Beatrice Prince Henry No hemophilia Irene Queen Elizabeth II Helena Arthur Leopold Prince Anne Andrew Edward Charles British Royal House VII William Henry Prussian Royal House Czarina Earl of Princess Maurice Leopold Queen Alfonso Alexandra Athlone Alice Eugenie King of Spain ? ? ? Anastasia Alexis Viscount Alfonso Jamie Juan Tremation Russian Royal House ? ? Gonzalo ? King Juan Carlos ? No evidence of hemophilia No evidence of hemophilia Spanish Royal House Other Genetic Disorders Downs Syndrome 21: Trisomy 21 Down syndrome is the only autosomal trisomy in which affected individuals survive to adulthood It occurs in about one in 700 live births Down syndrome is a group of symptoms that results from trisomy of chromosome 21 Some degree of mental retardation Turners Syndrome Turner (XO) syndrome females have only one sex chromosome, an X. Turner females are short, have a broad chest and webbed neck. Ovaries of Turner females never become functional; therefore, do not undergo puberty Klinefelter Syndrome Klinefelter syndrome males have one Y chromosome and two or more X chromosomes. Affected individuals are sterile males; testes and prostate are underdeveloped. Individuals have large hands and feet and long arms and legs. Triplo-X Females Triplo-X females have three or more X chromosomes. There is no increased femininity; most lack any physical abnormalities. There is an increased risk of having triplo-X daughters or XXY sons. May experience menstrual irregularities, including early onset of menopause. Jacob Syndrome XYY males with Jacob syndrome have two Y chromosomes instead of one. Results from nondisjunction during meiosis II. Usually taller than average; suffer from persistent acne; tend to have lower intelligence. Earlier claims that XYY individuals were likely to be aggressive are not correct