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Refresh of Mendelian Genetics

Refresh of Mendelian Genetics. Who was Gregor Mendel?. He was monk living in a monastery in Czechoslovakia in mid-1800’s. He was in charge of the monastic vege garden. He did breeding expt on peas. He cultivated ~29,000 peas plants!! …..his data was meticulously recorded.

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Refresh of Mendelian Genetics

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  1. Refresh of Mendelian Genetics

  2. Who was Gregor Mendel? • He was monk living in a monastery in Czechoslovakia in mid-1800’s. • He was in charge of the monastic vege garden. • He did breeding expt on peas. • He cultivated ~29,000 peas plants!! …..his data was meticulously recorded. • The amount of data is what makes his findings so reliable.

  3. Thanks to Mendel…. We know about words like…. • Homozygous dominant and recessive • Heterozygous • Genes • Alleles • Genotype • Phenotype • Mendel’s laws…. YOU WOULD HAVE LEARNT THESE TERMS LAST YEAR To see what you can remember.... Match and paste...

  4. Review • Chromosome structure • Gene – unit of inheritance – segment of DNA • Alleles • 2 versions of a gene (alleles) • Dominant, recessive • Alleles separated in the formation of gametes • Each gamete carries one allele for each pair • At fertilisation there is random uniting of gametes

  5. Monohybrid crosses • You learnt about these in Y11 science…. • They are genetic crosses of just one trait. • Punnet squares have 4 squares.

  6. Test Cross • An individual that displays a dominant trait can either be homozygous dominant or heterozygous • Eg. Straight thumb (H) is dominant to hitchhikers thumb (h) How do we tell if a straight thumbed individual is homozygous dominant or heterozygous?

  7. DO NOW • Tongue rolling (T) is dominant to non-tongue rolling (t). A tongue roller and non-tongue roller had children and produced tongue rollers and non-tongue rollers as children. • What were the genotypes of the parents? • Draw a punnet square to show possible off spring combinations.

  8. Incomplete Dominance • Sometimes alleles are not completely dominant over another allele. • Example: A red snapdragon flower crossed with a white flower could create a pink offspring. • F1 are all heterozygous. • Self-crossed F2 yields a ratio of: 1 : 2 : 1 Red: Pink: White

  9. Codominance • The heterozygous genotype shows both traits. • Example: BB = Black spotted cat bb = orange spotted cat Bb = Black and orange spotted cat Ratio 1 : 2 : 1 Black : Black+Orange : Orange • BLOOD GROUPS ALSO SHOW CODOMINANCE

  10. Lethal Alleles • Alleles which cause death when occurring as one of the homozygous genotypes • These cause death at embryo stage and so the ratio is 1:2 • Example: Achondroplastic dwarfism… 1 : 2 : 1 AA : Aa : aa Died:Dwarf:Normal

  11. Types of Explanations • Dwarfism is a result of autosomal dominantmutation in the fibroblastgrowth factorreceptor gene 3 (FGFR3), which causes an abnormality of cartilage formation. In normal circumstances, FGFR3 has a negative regulatory effect on bone growth. In achondroplasia, the mutated form of the receptor is constitutively active and this leads to severely shortened bones.

  12. Multiple Alleles • More than one allele can be positioned at a gene loci (address) • Example: Blood groups in people….. The protein's structure is controlled by three alleles; i, IA and IB. The first allele is, i, the recessive of the three, and IA and IB are both co-dominant when paired together

  13. Explanation • A and B are co-dominant and both are dominant to O….so O is recessive. • I is the allele that makes the antigen. • The antibody causes foreign antigens to clump together.

  14. Multiple alleles • Wool Fibre Diameter – B2A gene • A finest wool • B • C thickest wool • Another wool fibre gene KRT 1.2 • Wool protein • Many alleles

  15. Dihybrid Cross • A cross between two organisms where the inheritance patterns of TWO GENES are studied • There are a greater number of gamete types produced when two genes are considered • The genes are carried by separate chromosomes and are sorted independently of each other (WE WILL COVER THIS POINT SOON!)

  16. Dihybrid Crosses • Answer questions • Dihybrid Easy • More difficult dihybrid • Problems in

  17. Back of books 1-10 • Definitions

  18. Sex Linkage • Genes located on one sex chromosome but not on the other are called sex-linked genes. • The traits that show this kind of inheritance are almost always carried on the X chromosome • Examples: red-green colour blindness, haemophilia,

  19. Thought to be Y linked!!

  20. Sex-Linked Genes • For males, any sex linked gene on the X chromosome will show up because the Y has no matching gene to mask the effect • In females (having two X’s) the effect usually is masked – however they are ‘carriers’ (we will make sense of this statement!!)

  21. Example • A woman with normal vision whose father was colour- blind marries a man who is colour blind. Give the possible phenotype and genotype of such a cross. C = normal c = colour blind

  22. Homework • Research the genetics of tortoisehell cats and hand to me tomorrow on a separate piece of paper

  23. Mendels Laws • Mendel’s law of segregation – ‘of the two genes controlling each characteristic, only one is present in each gamete’. • Mendel’s law of Independent Assortment – ‘the segregation of one pair of alleles does not affect the segregation of another pair’

  24. Mendels Laws • The Law of Segregation states that the members of each pair of alleles separate when gametes are formed. A gamete will receive one allele or the other.

  25. Law of Segregation • the pair of alleles of each parent separate and only one allele passes from each parent on to an offspring • which allele in a parent's pair of alleles is inherited is a matter of chance  • segregation of alleles occurs during the process of gamete formation (meiosis) • randomly unite at fertilization

  26. Law or Independent Assorment • The Law of Independent Assortment: As chromosome pairs line up, each chromosome pair is sorted independently. Which chromosome of each pairs ends up in which cell is random = produces different combinations of parents chromosomes in gametes. • The Law of Segregation states that the members of each pair of alleles separate when gametes are formed. A gamete will receive one allele or the other.

  27. Law of Independent Assortment • During meiosis the homologous chromosomes line up at the equator of the spindle in pairs during Metaphase 1. • How they line up provides the basis for Independent Assortment.

  28. Independent assortment • http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/independentassortment.html

  29. 2 chromosome pairs alignment

  30. Exam question(2008) • During the process of meiosis, independent assortment and crossing over (recombination) can occur. This results in genetic variation in the offspring of sexually reproducing individuals • Describe what happens during independent assortment • Explain how crossing over (recombination) can contribute to the genetic variation that results from sexual reproduction. You may wish to draw a diagram. • Genetic variation can be a results from mutation. Explain the results of mutation sin somatic and gametic cells

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