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Section 10.2 Mendelian Genetics Objectives • • • Explain the significance of Mendel’s experiments to the study of genetics. Summarize the law of segregation and the law of independent assortment. Predict the possible offspring from a cross using a Punnett Square Main Idea • Mendel explained how a dominant allele can mask the presence of a recessive allele. How genetics began • Gregor Mendel ◦ an Austrian monk and plant breeder ◦ in 1866 published his findings on the method and mathematics of inheritance in green peas ◦ inheritance = passing of traits to the next generation ◦ • he chose pea plants because they are easy to grow true-breeders □ consistently produce one trait Pea plants ◦ usually reproduce by self-fertilization occurs when □ ♂ gamete • from the stamen of the flower □ fertilizes the ♀ gamete • from the pistil of a flower on the same plant ◦ they can also be cross-pollinated quite easily by hand gametes from different plant combine • Pea plants can also be cross-pollinated ◦ gametes from different plants combine • Mendel cross-pollinated the plants ◦ by transferring the ♂ gamete of one plant to the pistil of another plant • Mendel kept meticulous records ◦ analyzed the results ◦ formed hypotheses how traits were inherited ◦ this was the beginning of genetics Mendel is considered the father of genetics The Inheritance of Traits • Genetics ◦ = the science of heredity ◦ Mendel cross-pollinated a true-breeding plant with yellow seeds a true-breeding plant with green seeds • ◦ to prevent self-pollination he removed the ♂ reproductive organs from the flower ◦ he called this first cross the parent generation □ aka P generation He called the offspring fm his P gen ◦ the first filial-generation aka F1 generation ◦ all of the F1 seeds were yellow the green seed trait seemed to have disappeared ◦ when he crossed plants fm the F1 gen the green seed trait reappeared he called this the second filial-generation □ aka F2 generation • Mendel collected all of the seeds from the F2 generation ◦ he collected 8023 seeds 6022 were yellow 2001 were green almost a perfect 3:1 ratio • Mendel studied 7 different traits ◦ seed shape ◦ seed color ◦ flower color ◦ seed pod shape ◦ ◦ ◦ • • • seed pod color flower stem length Genes in pairs ◦ Mendel concluded that there are 2 forms seed color each is controlled by a factor today the factor is called an allele ◦ allele = an alternative form of a single gene □ passed from gen to gen ◦ therefore gene for yellow seeds gene for green seeds are diff forms of a single gene Mendel ◦ concluded 3:1 ratio could be explained if the alleles were paired in the plants ◦ the trait that appeared in the F1 gen was dominant ◦ it masked the other F1 trait □ which was recessive ◦ in pea plants the yellow seed trait is dominant form the green seed trait is recessive form Dominance ◦ Mendel concluded that in the F1 gen the yellow seed allele □ represented by the letter ‘Y’ ◦ masked the green seed allele □ the recessive allele □ represented by the letter ‘y’ upper case indicates the dominant allele so a yellow seeded plant could have ‘YY’ or ‘Yy’ ◦ • If a pea plant has 2 of the same alleles ◦ its called homozygous for that trait ◦ ex: ‘YY’ – homozygous dominant ‘yy’ – homozygous recessive ◦ ◦ • • • a green seeded plant would have ‘yy’ If a pea plant has both forms of the allele its called heterozygous for that trait ex: ‘Yy’ -- heterozygous Genotype and phenotype ◦ genotype = the genetic makeup of an organism ◦ phenotype = the outward appearance of the trait ◦ ex: if a pea plant has yellow seeds its phenotype is yellow seeds genotype could be either ‘YY’ or ‘Yy’ ◦ ex: a pea plant with green seeds its phenotype is green seeds genotype can only be ‘yy’ Law of segregation ◦ states that two alleles for each trait separate or segregate during meiosis ◦ during fertilization two alleles for this trait □ reunite in the zygote ◦ the resulting pea plant is the F1 gen all of these plants are heterozygous □ i.e. ‘Yy’ with yellow seeds □ heterozygous organisms are called ~ hybrids Monohybrid cross ◦ = a cross that involves hybrids for a single trait ◦ dominant allele is always written first followed by the recessive allele • Law of independent assortment ◦ = states that a random distribution of alleles occurs during gamete formation • Mendel suggested ◦ that the alleles for tallness and shortness in the F1 plants segregated from each other during the formation of the sex cells □ gametes • When each F1 plant produces gametes ◦ the two alleles segregate from each other so that each gamete carries only a single copy of each gene ◦ • each F1 plant produces two types of gametes those with the allele for tallness those with the allele for shortness Dihybrid cross ◦ once Mendel determined patterns for a single trait he started looking at what would happen if two traits were inherited together ◦ another trait he looked at was seed shape round seeds – represented by ‘R’ □ this allele was dominant wrinkled seeds – represented by ‘r’ • He performed a cross using traits for ◦ seed color ◦ seed shape • He crossed a ◦ homozygous yellow, round seed plant ◦ homozygous green, wrinkled seed plant ◦ the P genotypes would be ‘YYRR’ and ‘yyrr’ ◦ the F1 gen’s genotype would be ‘YyRr’ yellow, round seed • Dihybrid cross ◦ = the simultaneous inheritance of two or more traits in the same plant ◦ in the pea plant round seeds (R) is dominant to □ wrinkled seeds (r) yellow seeds (Y) is dominant to □ green seeds (y) ◦ Mendel crossed a homozygous round yellow seed plant □ genotype –RRYY a homozygous wrinkled green seed plant □ genotype –rryy ◦ F1 generation all plants would be RrYy gametes can be □ RY Ry rY ry • In this dihybrid cross ◦ the phenotypes that will be seen are 9 will have round yellow seeds 3 will have round green seeds 3 will have wrinkled yellow seeds 1 will have wrinkled green seeds • Law of independent assortment ◦ = a random distribution of alleles occurs during gamete formation ◦ genes on separate chromosomes sort independently during meiosis ◦ • each allele combination is equally likely to occur Punnett square ◦ tool used to predict the possible offspring of a cross between two known genotypes ◦ monohybrid cross place the gametes □ across the tope □ down the left side ◦ ◦ ◦ bring the alleles □ down from above □ across from the left upper case letter represents the dominant allele for tall lowercase letter represents the recessive allele for short in this example, T = tall t = short ◦ gametes produced by each F1 parent are shown along the top down left side ◦ bringing the genes down & across ◦ possible F2 gene combinations appear in the four boxes ◦ phenotypic ratio of 3 : 1 3 tall to 1 short ◦ the genotypic ratio is 1 TT : 2 Tt : 1 tt ◦ the chance for each square is 25% 1 in 4 Probability • Probability ◦ = the chance that something will occur in a prescribed number of trials ex: flipping a coin □ probability of getting heads is 1 out of 2 ~ or ½ ◦ in a Punnett square the data may not match the predicted ratios □ but it will be close • the greater the number of trials □ the closer the data will approach the probability In our pea plant dihybrid cross ◦ the expected phenotypic ratios are 9/16 – both dominant traits (R_Y_) 3/16 – one dominant & one rec trait (R_yy) 3/16 – opposite traits (rrY_) 1/16 – both recessive traits (rryy) ◦ phenotypic ratio is 9 : 3 : 3 : 1