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Genetic Inheritance According to Gregor Mendel CHAPTER 9 • Overview of Inheritance • Mendel's Pea Plants • Monohybrid Crosses and Segregation • Definitions of Genetic Terms • Dihybrid Crosses and Independent Assortment • Test Crosses • The Role of Probability • Pedigrees and Genetic Conditions • Human Single-Gene Disorders Heritable Variation and Patterns of Inheritance • Gregor Mendel – Was the first person to analyze patterns of inheritance. – Deduced the fundamental principles of genetics. In an Abbey Garden • Mendel studied garden peas • Pea flowers have both male and female parts • The ovary of the carpel produces eggs by meiosis • The anthers of the stamens produce pollen (sperm equivalent) by meiosis • Pollen grains fly from the anthers of the same flower or from another plant to the carpel and fertilize the eggs in the ovary • Pea flowers are enclosed within petals such that only insect pollination can effectively transfer pollen from one plant to another How Mendel Fertilized Pea Flower Eggs and Ensured a Single Pollen Source Figure 9.4 • He also created true-breeding varieties of plants. • Mendel then crossed two different true-breeding varieties. • Mendel performed many experiments. – He tracked several characteristics in pea plants from which he formulated several hypotheses. True Breeding Varieties Available to Mendel Figure 9.5 A Single-Factor (Monohybrid) Cross Figure 9.6a • Hypotheses From The Monohybrid Cross – The letters P and p were used to designate flower color: P = purple, p = white – There are alternative forms of genes called alleles – There are two gene forms (alleles) for every characteristic in the plant – Some alleles mask or hide the presence of other alleles; these are dominant alleles symbolized by a capital letter (eg. P). – Alleles that can be masked are called recessive alleles, symbolized by a lowercase letter (eg. p) Allelic Combinations: Genotype • Every cell in an organism carries two alleles at a time for every characteristic – For a pea plant flower color, a plant could have cells with PP, Pp, or pp. • Genotype combinations – PP is homozygous dominant, yields purple flowers – pp is homozygous recessive, yields white flowers – Pp is heterozygous, yields purple flowers Some Definitions • Phenotype – An organism’s physical traits • Genotype – An organism’s genetic makeup • Mendel’s law of segregation – The two members of an allele pair segregate (separate) from each other during the production of gametes. Following Mendel’s True Breeding Cross True breeding varieties are homozygous PP Meiosis Gametes: P Or more simply: P P P pp P p P p Meiosis p p p p p p Next, determine all the possible ways the gametes of one parent can combine with the gametes of another: P Pp Pp Fill out a Punnett Square P Pp Pp Genotype of the offspring are all Pp in the ratio: 4 Pp: 0 PP: 0 pp (Genotypic ratio) Phenotypic ratio of the offspring: 4 purple: 0 white Determining the F2 Offspring Pp x Pp Genetic Alleles and Homologous Chromosomes • Homologous chromosomes – Have genes at specific loci. – Have alleles of a gene at the same locus. Mendel’s Law of Independent Assortment • A dihybrid cross – Is the mating of parental varieties differing in two characteristics. • Two hypotheses for gene assortment in a dihybrid cross are – Dependent assortment. – Independent assortment • Mendel’s law of independent assortment states that – Each pair of alleles segregates independently of the other pairs during gamete formation. Figure 9.8 Figure 9.23 Genes for Coat Color and Vision Sort Independently into Gametes Figure 9.9 Using a Testcross to Determine an Unknown Genotype • A testcross is a mating between – An individual of unknown genotype and a homozygous recessive individual. The Rules of Probability • The rule of multiplication states that • The probability of a compound event is the product of the separate probabilities of the independent events. Human Characteristics That Follow Mendel’s Laws Figure 9.12 Using a Pedigree to Follow an Autosomal Recessive Gene • A family pedigree – Shows the history of a trait in a family. – Allows geneticists to analyze human traits. Human Disorders Controlled by a Single Gene • Many human traits – Show simple inheritance patterns. – Are controlled by genes on autosomes. Recessive Disorders • Most human genetic disorders are recessive. – Individuals can be carriers of these diseases. Dominant Disorders • Some human genetic disorders are dominant. – Achondroplasia is a form of dwarfism.