1. who is named the “father of genetics?” gregor mendel 2. why did he use pea plants?

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1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants? To study the inheritance of traits. “Pure bred” and “true breeding” “Homozygous”. aa x aa. AA x aa. AA x AA. AA aa. Hybrid and Heterozygous. A a 2 Alleles are different. A a. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?
Page 2: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?”

Gregor Mendel

2. Why did he use pea plants? To study the inheritance of traits

Page 3: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

“Pure bred” and “true breeding”

“Homozygous”

AA x AA

aa x aa

AA aa

AA x aa

Page 4: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Hybrid and Heterozygous

A a A a A a

2 Alleles are different

Page 5: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

All hybrid (Aa)

offspring result

Cross two pure “true” breeding parents with different traits

Page 6: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

What are the offspring of two pure bred parents called?

TT x tt “P” Generation

4 Tt “F1” Generation

Page 7: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

What results when the offspring (F1) of true breeding parents self-pollinate (breed with themselves)?

Genotype Ratio: 1 PP: 2 Pp: 1 ppPhenotype Ratio: 3 Purple: 1 White

Pp Pp

Pp Pp

PP Pp

Pp pp

Page 8: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Probability= The chance of something happening!

Chance of getting heads ½ or 50%

Page 9: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

More times you flip a penny, the more likely you are to

get the “expected” outcome (probability).

½ heads, ½ tails

Page 10: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

½ x ½ x ½ x ½ x ½ x ½

1/64

If you toss a coin 6 times in a row, what is the probability it will land heads for all 6 tosses?

Page 11: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Independent AssortmentDuring gamete formation, genes for different traits

separate without influencing the other.Foil each parentto get 4 gametes

G g Y y GYGygYgy

Page 12: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Complete Dominance

The dominant trait (G) over shadows the recessive trait (g) and only the dominant trait shows up in the phenotype.

Incomplete Dominance

Neither trait is dominant over the other and a new trait is displayed. BLENDING!!!Red flowers crossed with white flowers make pink flowers.

Co-Dominance

Both traits are equally displayed and neither is dominant over the other.ABO blood types: A blood x B blood = AB blood

Page 13: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Describe the genotypes and phenotypes of each blood type:

AB has same Genotype & Phenotype

Co-Dominance

Page 14: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

What are polygenic traits?Traits that have a wide variety of color ranges such as eye colors, hair color, skin color and

height.

Page 15: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

First determine how many different letters are there for each letter type then multiply!

A A B b C c D d E E F F G g H h 1 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 1 x 1 x 2 x 2 =

32 gametes

How many different gametes?

Page 16: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Can this parent AaBBccDdeeFfGgHH have a child with the following genotype? Why or why not?

NO, because the parent would need to have a big E in their genotype in order for the child to have an E.

A A B b C c D d E E F F G g H h

Page 17: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Know what forms from the sex cells in females and males!

4 Sperm are produced

1 Egg and 3 polar bodies are produced

FemaleMale

Page 18: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Crossing Over occurs during Prophase 1 of Meiosis

Why is this important? Genetic Diversity

Page 19: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

The paired, Homologous Chromosomes

come together during Meiosis I to make Tetrads

The chromatids pull apart during Meiosis I I

4 genetically different cells result at the end of MeiosisHaploid = 1None set of chromosomes

Know the stages of Meiosis I & II

Page 20: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Mitosis

Cellular Division

2 Genetically Identical Cells

P

M

A

T

Page 21: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

MITOSIS VS. MEIOSIS

GametesSomatic Cells

Page 22: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Mitosis MeiosisSomatic Cells - all body cells

except sex cellsSex Cells – Gametes

(Egg or Sperm)

2 genetically identical cells 4 genetically different cells

Diploid – “2N”2 sets of Chromosomes

Haploid – “N”1 set of Chromosomes

No Genetic Diversity GENETIC DIVERSITY!

Goes through PMAT once(Prophase, Meta, Ana, Telo)

Goes through PMAT twice(Prophase I, Meta I, Ana I, Telo I)

then(Prophase II, Meta II, Ana II, Telo II)

VS

Page 23: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Karyotype

Shows:• Autosomes = all chromosomes # 1 - 22 chromosome

pairs (not sex chromosomes)• Sex Chromosomes

XX= female or XY= male (# 23 pair)• Homologous Chromosomes = chromosomes that

code for the same traits and pair up with each other• Inherited Disorders (ex: Down’s, Turner’s,

Kleinfelter’s, Super males/females)

46 Chromosomes

23 Pairs

Page 24: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Non-disjunction –When chromosome pairs don’t separate properly during Meiosis I

Can involve all chromosomes (sex, autosomes

Page 25: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Down’s Syndrome (Trisomy 21)“Trisomy” means extra chromosome

Page 26: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

XXY

Kleinfelter’s Syndrome

Extra X chromosome

Page 27: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

XO

Turner’s Syndrome

Page 28: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Fatherdetermines

sex of offspring

Father provides either an X or a

Y to pair up with the

mother’s X to make a boy or

girl50% chance of Boy XY 50% chance of Girl XX

Page 29: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Pedigree Chart •shows how a trait is passed from one generation to the next•Shows male or female•Shows “no trait” “carries trait” or “has trait”

3 Generations shown

Normal Male

Normal Female

Female with Trait

Carrier Female

Male with Trait

Line = Marriage

Page 30: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Know the term Sex-linked genes/traits and how the key and Punnett square would look. What chromosome carries these types of traits?

XB Xb

Xb XBXb XbXb

Y XBY XbY

XBXb x XbY female carrier x male color blind

Phenotypes: 1 Female/Carrier 1 Female/Color blind1 Male/Normal 1 Male/Color blind

Sex-linked traits only carried on X Y doesn’t carry traits

Sex-linked gene/trait – Traits linked to sex chromosomes such as hemophilia or colorblindness

Page 31: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

Know how to do the following types of crosses:

•Monohybrid Cross (1 Trait; Complete Dominance)•Dihybrid Cross (2 traits)

•Incomplete Dominance Cross (Red, Pink, and White Flowers)

• Co-Dominance Cross (Blood Groups)• Sex-linked Cross (XᴴX ͪ & X ͪY)

(key, parents’ genotypes, possible gametes, Punnett square, genotypes and phenotypes of offspring)

Page 32: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

•Allele- Different forms of a gene•Gametes- Sex Cells (egg & sperm – Haploid)•Gene- Part of a chromosome; codes for traits•Genetics- Study of how traits are passed generation to generation• Karyotype- Picture of all paired chromosomes

Autosomes and Sex Cells•Pedigree- Family tree (picture) shows passing of trait from one generation to the next generation•Probability - Chance of something happening•Punnett Square- Chart showing offspring’s trait probabilities

Page 33: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

•Dominant – Gene whose effect masks the partner (recessive) trait•Recessive – Gene whose effect is masked by partner (dominant) trait•Genotype – Genetic makeup of organism (letters)•Phenotype – Trait expressed “physical” looks•Heterozygous – Pair of different alleles (Rr)•Homozygous – Pair of same kind of alleles (RR) (rr)•Trait – Inherited characteristic (feature)•Homologous – Pair of same kind of chromosomes

Page 34: 1. Who is named the “Father of Genetics?” Gregor Mendel 2. Why did he use pea plants?

•Co-dominance – Both alleles expressed EQUALLY•Incomplete dominance – Blending of traits•Diploid – Having 2 sets of chromosomes “2N”•Haploid – Having 1 set of chromosomes “N”•Independent Assortment – Genes that separate have no effect on the other’s inheritance•Non-disjunction – When chromosomes don’t separate•Segregation – Separation of alleles