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Genetics Q: What is GENETICS? A: Q: How do we inherit our traits? A: Q: How do we know so much about genetics today? A: The work of Gregor Mendel in the 1850’and 1860’s. He studied pea plants and noticed that pea plants had opposite traits in many cases. He saw that the plants were either tall or short, had yellow or green pea color, had wrinkled or smooth seeds, and so forth. *See pages 80-85 in orange books. List 10 Specific traits that you have below: 1. 6. 2. 7. 3. 8. 4. 9. 5. 10. The specific trait that you have for any type of characteristic is also called the phenotype. The phenotype is the physical expression of the genes. In other words, what the genes give a code for. For example, my eye-color genes give a code for BLUE EYES. Blue eyes is my phenotype for that trait. Also, I have a gene that gives a code for ASTHMA, whereas many people have a gene that gives a code NOT to have asthma. My phenotype is “having asthma”. Facts about our genes: 1. We have pairs of chromosomes in each cell. 2. Each chromosome has genes on it. 3. Chromosomes come in pairs because . Therefore, the genes ON the chromosomes always come in pairs. This means we have 2 alternate genes for each trait. They could be the same, or they could be different. These 2 alternate genes are called Alleles. Alleles: Dominant Allele – The “Strongest Gene”. The allele that is always expressed over the other one. This means that if you have 1 dominant allele for any trait, you will have that dominant trait. We write dominant alleles with a capitol letter. For example, a capitol B for green or brown eyes. Recessive Allele –The “Weakest Gene”. The allele that doesn’t show up unless there are two of them for the trait. If you have one dominant allele and one recessive allele, you will have the dominant trait. We write recessive alleles with a lower case letter. For example, lower case b for blue eyes. Genotype – The genotype is the actual alleles that you have for any given trait. You have 3 possibilities for your genotype for any trait: 1. You could have both dominant alleles (For example, BB) Q: What would be your PHENOTYPE for this genotype? 2. You could have one dominant and one recessive allele (For example, Bb) Q: What would be your phenotype for this genotype? 3. You could have both recessive alleles (For example, bb) Q: What would be your phenotype for this genotype? There are 2 types of genotypes: 1. Purebred (homozygous)—When both alleles are the same. 2. Hybrid (heterozygous)—When the alleles are different. In other words, both alleles are dominant or both alleles are recessive. You would write that with both capitol letters or both letters are lower-case. For example, BB or bb One is dominant and one is recessive. Therefore, you write one capitol letter and one lower-case letter. For example, Bb Punnett Squares: Q: What are punnett sqares? A: A method of predicting what genes the offspring between 2 parents will have. We use them to do genetic crosses, which are how make this prediction. *We can predict the Probability of offspring inheriting particular traits. Probability means . Examples: 1. If b = Blue eyes and B = brown or green eyes, what would be the genotype of a hybrid parent? What colored eyes would this person have? What would be the genotype of a blue eyed person? Step One: Write down the genotypes of both of the parents, one at a time. Step Two: Draw a punnett square. One box, broken up into 4 smaller boxes. Step Three: Put one parent across the top of the box and one parent down the left side of the box. Step Four: Combine the letters inside the square. Examples: 1. Cross a hybrid green eyed parent with a blue eyed parent. What is the probability of these parents having a blue-eyed offspring? More Punnett Square Examples: 2. If T = tall height, and t = short height, cross a purebred tall person with a hybrid person. What is the probability of these two parents having a short offspring? 3. If G = having green pea pods, and g = having yellow pea pods, cross 2 hybrid plants together. What is the probability of the offspring having green pods? 4. If H = happy personality, cross 2 hybrid parents together. What is the probability of these parents having an offspring who is not happy? 5. In whitetail deer, having albino fur is caused by a recessive gene (a). Cross a purebred deer with normal fur with an albino deer. What is the probability of the offspring being albino? 6. If having normal breathing is dominant (A) over having asthma, cross 2 hybrid parents together. What is the probability of the offspring breathing normally? 7. In people with diabetes, the gene that produces insulin is faulty. This is caused by a recessive gene (i). Cross a hybrid parent with a parent that has diabetes. What is the probability of the offspring having diabetes? Blood type Punnett Squares: *Different because there are 3 different alleles. Instead of one being dominant and 1 being recessive, two are dominant, and one is recessive. A= type A blood (dominant) B=type B blood (dominant) O=type O blood (recessive) A and B together are codominant which gives type AB blood The only way to get type O blood is to have “OO” as your genotype. Examples: 1. Cross AB x OO. List all phenotypic ratios 2. Cross a hybrid type A (AO) and a hybrid type B (BO) person. List all phenotypic ratios. 3. Cross AA X AB Pedigree Charts: *Show the relationships between traits of family members. Pg. 118 orange books. Rules: Circle=female Square=male Fully shaded in=they have that trait Half shaded in (always a female)= don’t have the trait, but carry a gene for it (hybrid genotype) Not shaded in = don’t have that trait. The most current generation (children or grandchildren) are at the bottom. 1. How many children did the original parents have? 2. How many grandchildren are there? 3. How many total family members have the disease? 4. Write down the genotype of the daughter ] Pedigree Charts: What is a pedigree chart? A family tree that traces the inheritance of sex linked traits in humans. Example: *Look at page 118 in orange books. Copy this pedigree chart below: Questions about pedigree chart on page 118: 1. How many children did the original parents have? 2. What % of the grandchildren have colorblindness? 3. What % of the grandchildren are carriers for the disease (hybrid)? 4. What % of the grandchildren have normal vision? Vocabulary, Unit 6 Genetics Pedigree chart Phenotype Genotype Dominant Recessive Allele Sex linked trait Codominance—when more than one allele are dominant together (Ex: blood type) Purebred (homozygous) Hybrid (heterozygous) Punnett Square Genetic Crosses—What we do in the punnett square to predict the offspring Greg Mendel Probability