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More Punnett squares

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More Punnett squares. Complete Dominance. Involves dominant and recessive alleles dominant allele always overpowers the recessive allele in appearance. Incomplete Dominance. Neither allele is dominant or recessive - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: More Punnett squares

More Punnett squares

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Complete Dominance

•Involves dominant and recessive alleles•dominant allele always overpowers the recessive allele in appearance

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Incomplete Dominance

• Neither allele is dominant or recessive• Organisms with two different phenotypes

produces offspring with a third phenotype that is a blending of the parents

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Incomplete Dominance

• Ex: Cross a red flower (RR) with a white flower (WW) and the offspring will be pink (RW)!

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Incomplete Dominance

• In another flower, if red ____ and blue ____ flowers are crossed, they produce a 3rd purple ____ flower

• What would be the genotypic ratio and phenotypic ratio if you crossed two purple flowers?

(RR)

(RB)(BB)

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Incomplete Dominance

• Cross of two purple flowers_RB_ X _RB_

• What are gamete possibilities?• genotypic ratio 1RR : 2RB : 1BB1RR : 2RB : 1BB• phenotypic ratio 1red : 2 purple : 1 blue1red : 2 purple : 1 blue

RRred

RBpurple

RBpurple

BBblue

R

B

B

R

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Codominance

• Neither allele is dominant or recessive• Parents with different phenotypes produce an

offspring with a third phenotype– Third phenotype will show both parental

phenotypes simultaneously (at the same time)

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Codominance• In cattle and horses, if you cross

a pure red (RR) with a pure white (WW), you get (RW) which produces the color roan.

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Codominance• These cattle or horses actually have both red

and white hairs intermixed, or are spotted. Roan is a third phenotype.

• If you cross a roan with a white… • RW X WW

RWroan

WWwhite

RWroan

WWwhite

R

W

W

W

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Multiple alleles

• two or more possible alleles for the same gene within a population

• Thus multiple alleles• However, individuals within the population

are only able to hold two of them

• Non-human examples: rabbit fur color, mice skin color, eye color in flies, wing size in flies

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Multiple Alleles

• Blood type in humans• The _four_ different

blood types: – A, B, O, and AB

• Blood types are produced by three_ different alleles: – A, B and O

Phenotype Genotype

A AA or AO

B BB or BO

AB AB only

O OO only

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Genotype for Blood Type

I and i used in genotypeI used with A and Bi used with O

A and B are dominant over O: A and B are codominant

Ex: Genotype: AA is IAIA

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Blood type chart

PHENOTYPE GENOTYPEA AA, IAIA

A AO, IAiB BB, IBIB

B BO, IBiAB AB, IAIB

O OO, ii

Blood type AB is an example of codominance in humans

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Blood Type Punnett Square

• Draw a Punnett square showing all the possible genotypes for the offspring produced by a type “O” mother and an a Type “AB” father.

Cross: ii x IAIBIAi IAi

IBi IBi

ii

IA

IB

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Blood Type Punnett Square

• Cross a female with blood type A and a male with heterozygous B blood type.

• Complete ratios (phenotypic and genotypic)

• A male with blood type B has a child with a woman who has blood type A. The child is blood type O. What is the genotype of the male and female? Show your work.

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How does blood type work?

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Blood transfusions

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Rh factor: Rh for Rhesus Monkey• Positive vs Negative Blood types

• Positive: protein is present• Dominant trait

• Negative: protein is absent• Recessive trait

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Polygenic traits

• Traits controlled by two or more genes (one gene has two alleles)

• Show a wide range of phenotypes• Phenotype is produced by the interaction of

more than one pair of alleles

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Examples of polygenic traits in humans

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Example of polygenic traits in humans

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Examples of polygenic traits in humans

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Sex-linked traits

• Every new born has a 50% chance of being female and a 50% chance being male– DAD: X Y

• Sperm contains either:

– MOM: X X• Eggs all contain:

YX

X

or

XX XY

XX XY

X

X

X

Y

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Sex-Linked traits

• The X chromosome contains many genes, whereas the Y chromosome contains only a few genes

• sex-linked genes: genes located on one of the sex chromosomes (X or Y) but not the other

• most sex-linked genes are X-linked genes

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Examples of sex-linked traits: X-linked

• Colorblindness: more common in males than females

• Hemophilia: more common in males than females

Both colorblindness and Hemophilia are recessive traits

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Colorblindness

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Do any of these pictures look the same?!

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Test time!

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Colorblind: X-linked trait• C- normal vision• c- colorblind• You must incorporate XX (mom) and XY (dad)• This is how to set it up:

• (remember colorblindness is X-linked!)

Normal vision Heterozygous(carrier) Colorblind

Female: XX

Male: XY

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Punnett Square

• Cross a female who is a carrier for colorblindness with a normal vision man.

• Cross a normal vision woman (homozygous) with a colorblind man.

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Hemophilia: X-linked recessive trait

• Hemophilia is the inability for blood to clot– Your blood clots every time you get a papercut

–H: normal clotting– h: hemophilia

– Make a key for hemophilia:• Normal female: Normal Male:• Female Carrier: Can a man be a carrier? • Female with hemophilia: Male with: