genetics: a monk a pea and a fly

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Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

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Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly. Mendel and His Peas. Born in Czech Republic in 1822 Studied math in Vienna Was in charge of the monastery garden Conducted controlled breeding between true-breeding pea plants to study inheritance. Garden Peas : Tasty and Educational. Easy to grow - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Page 2: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Mendel and His Peas• Born in Czech

Republic in 1822• Studied math in

Vienna• Was in charge of the

monastery garden• Conducted controlled

breeding between true-breeding pea plants to study inheritance

Page 3: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Garden Peas : Tasty and Educational

• Easy to grow• Fast growing• Number of easily

recognized traits• Lots of offspring

(each seed)• Easy to control

crossing

Page 4: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Mendel’s Crosses

Page 5: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Dominant and Recessive Traits

• Noticed traits in the F1 were not a blend of the parents but, instead favored one parent

• Trait that shows up the F1 generation is Dominant the trait that is masked is Recessive

• Today : Traits chemical factors = Genes Forms of a trait = Alleles

Page 6: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly
Page 7: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

The F1 Cross• Mendel then crossed the F1 plants and the

recessive trait reappeared!• What happened? *Segregation : Alleles on homologous

chromosomes separate when sex cells are produced

Think about the logic here

Page 8: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly
Page 9: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Genotypes and Phenotypes

• Genotype : expression of alleles present Dominant alleles : Capital first letter of

the dominant trait Recessive alleles : Lower case script of

the first letter of the dominant trait Homozygote : Two of the same allele Heterozygote : Two different alleles• Phenotype : Actual visible trait

Page 10: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

• Example : Flower colorPurple (P) is dominant to white (p)Cross a pure breeding plant with purple

flowers with a pure breeding plant with white flowers.

1) Determine genotypes 2) Segregate alleles 3) Perform cross

Page 11: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Probability and Genetics• Chance of an event occurring : probability• Does not indicate something will happen

only the likelihood that it can happen• Allele combinations follow rules of

probability• Probabilities in genetics can be

determined using simple math or Punnett squares

Page 12: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Mr. Curry’s Never Miss, Easy, Solves Every Type of Genetics Problem Method

1. Define alleles2. Define phenotypes associated with genotypes3. Write out cross4. Produce gametes5. Perform cross (Punnett square)6. Determine genotypic and phenotypic ratios of

offspring7. Answer the problem

Page 13: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly
Page 14: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Typical Monohybrid • Homozygous Dominant X Homozygous

Recessive P= F1= F2=

Page 15: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Two Traits at Once : Dihybrid Cross

• How do you determine inheritance for two traits at once?

- Dihybrid Cross• Just remember : Segregation and

Independent Assortment (For now, these genes exist on separate chromosomes)

Page 16: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly
Page 17: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

• In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, vestigial wings and hairy body are produced by two recessive alleles carried on different chromosomes. The normal alleles, long wings and hairless body, are dominant. If a vestigial-winged, hairy male is crossed with a female homozygous for

• both of the normal traits, what would be the phenotypes and genotypes of their progeny? If the

• F1 generation was allowed to mate randomly among themselves, what phenotypes and genotypes would be expected among the F2’s, and in what proportions?

Page 18: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

• In some breeds of dogs, a dominant allele controls the characteristic of barking while trailing. In

• these dogs, another, independent gene controls ear shape, erect ears being dominant over floppy ears.

• If a dog breeder wants to produce a true-breeding strain of floppy-eared dogs that bark on the trail,

• how should she proceed, knowing that the alleles for erect ears and silent trailing are present in her

• kennels?

Page 19: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

• P cross = Homozygous Dominant X Homozygous Recessive

P= F1= F2=

Page 20: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Other Types of Inheritance

• Not all genes are dominant or recessive• Sometimes get both alleles, a modified

form or the dominant or something new altogether

Page 21: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Incomplete Dominance• Two alleles produce three phenotypes• Third phenotype is a muted version of the

“dominant”• Example 4 O’clock flowersRR = RedRW= PinkWW = White

Page 22: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Codominance• When two alleles are both equally

expressed in the heterozygote• Example : ABO bloodtypesIAIA, IAi =A type bloodIBIB, IBi = B type bloodIAIB = AB type bloodii = O type blood

Page 23: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Sex Determination• In all animals : Sex is determined by the

combination of sex chromosomes (23rd pair in humans)

• XX = female• Xy = male

Page 24: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Polygenic Inheritance• Traits are governed by more than one

gene• Most traits are polygenic• Each gene may have two or more alleles• Many genes can be codominant or

incompletely dominant• Heterozygotes are intermediate in

phenotype

Page 25: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

• A recessive gene combination will effect the phenotype

Page 26: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly
Page 27: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

Multiple Alleles

Page 28: Genetics: A Monk a Pea and a Fly

The Fruit Fly

Drosophila melanogaster Homo sapiens