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Principles of Inheritance

Principles of Inheritance. GENETICS. DNA. found in nucleus of each cell composes chromosomes chromosomes contain genes genes are biological blueprints dictate how we look, how our body functions & may be even how we behave traits are inherited passed down from generations before us

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Principles of Inheritance

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  1. Principles of Inheritance GENETICS

  2. DNA • found in nucleus of each cell • composes chromosomes • chromosomes contain genes • genes are biological blueprints • dictate how we look, how our body functions & may be even how we behave • traits are inherited • passed down from generations before us • science of heredity is genetics

  3. Genetics • the idea of traits being inherited has been around since time of ancient Greek philosophers • modern science of genetics did not begin until 1860 • Gregor Mendel • Father of Genetics • helped lay down principles of modern genetics • Central European monk • conducted experiments using garden peas • ideas were published in 1860's but were unrecognized until after his death • not appreciated until early 1900s • work applies to humans as well as peas • illustrates basic rules of inheritance

  4. Rules of Inheritance • Mendel discovered basic genetic principles breeding garden pea plant • exercised strict control over mating of these plants • studied seven characteristics • each with two possible forms • flower color-purple or white • seed color-yellow or green • flower position-axil or terminal • pod shape-inflated or constricted • stem length-long or short • pod color-yellow or green • seed shape-round or wrinkled

  5. Rules of Inheritance • most important conclusion was • inherited variations are transmitted to offspring as discrete units • until this time most assumed characteristics of individual organisms were blended from generation to generation • particulate theory • Particles-now known as genes GENE

  6. True Breeding Plants • before beginning Mendel worked with his plants to ensure he had true-breeding plants • produce offspring that are identical to parents • purple flowers purple offspring

  7. Hybridization-Cross-Breeding • purple mom + white dad • hybridization • or simply a cross • offspring are hybrids

  8. Cross-Breeding • true breeding parents-P generation • for parental • children-F1 generation • f=filial-Latin for son • when F1 plants are matedoffspring-F2 generation

  9. Mendel’s Experiments • Mendel noticed that traits were transmitted in predictable ways from parents to offspring • crossed different strains of purebred plants & studied their progeny • at first worked with consequences of crossing one trait at a time • monohybrid cross • would cross purple plant with white plant & look at color of offspring • F1 generation of this cross was always purple • Mendel wondered what had happened to heritable factor for white

  10. Mendel’s Experiments • when crossed F1 generations • missing white factor reappeared • 75% of offspring had purple flowers • 25% had white flowers • 3:1 ratio

  11. Mendel’s Experiments • same pattern of inheritance was found for all characteristics of pea plant • in cross-pollinating green pods-first offspring generation (f1) always had green pods • f2generation consistently had 3:1 ratio of green to yellow

  12. Mendel’s Conclusions • white or yellow genes do not disappear in f1 generation • masked by purple or green gene • individuals inherit one unit from each parent for each trait • specific trait may not show up in an individual • may be passed to next generation • from his results, Mendel described four specific hypotheses

  13. Mendel’s Hypotheses • there are alternative forms of genes-alleles • for each inherited characteristic an organism must have 2 genes • one from each parent • maybe the same or different • two of same allele- homozygous • two different alleles-heterozygous

  14. Mendel’s Hypotheses • alleles represent genotype • when alleles are differentallele that determines appearance (phenotype) is dominant • other allele has no observable effect on phenotype-recessive • dominant genes are always expressed • need only one dominant gene to have a particular phenotype • to have recessive characteristic individual must carry two recessive genes • unlessgene islocated on a sex chromosome • customary to use capital letters for dominant traits • small letters for recessive ones

  15. Genotype & Phenotype • brown eye color is dominant (B) • blue (b) is recessive • person with genotype BB or Bbwould have brown eyes • person with genotype bb would have blue ones

  16. Law of Segregation • each f1 generation plant inherits one allele from one parent & one allele from the other • when f1 plants mated, each allele had an equal chance of being passed on to offspring • for any particular trait, a pair of alleles from each parent separate • only one allelepasses from each parent tooffspring • which allele in a parent's pair is inherited is a matter of chance

  17. Law of Segregation • genes occur in pairs because chromosomes occur in pairs • during gamete production-members of each gene pair separate so each gamete contains one member of a pair • during fertilization full number of chromosomes is restored • members of a gene or allele pair are reunited • segregation of alleles occurs during process of gamete formation-meiosis

  18. PunnettSquare • used to illustrate basic rules of inheritance • shows alleles of mother and alleles of father • bysimple multiplication one can figure out probability of obtaining offspring with characteristics of parents

  19. PunnettSquare

  20. Examples

  21. Example • Brown eyed father-BB • Blue eyes-mother-bb • Recessive trait

  22. father with red hair recessivetrait has children with mother with black hair dominant trait probability of having children with red hair is ? each child would carry a gene for red hair this is the case if mother has two dominant alleles in her genotype what if we know that woman’s mother had red hair Example r r R Rr Rr Rr R Rr

  23. Dihybrid Cross • Mendel next crossed & followed inheritance of two traits at same time • dihybird crosses

  24. Dihydrid Crosses • two of the characteristics Mendel studied were seed shape & color • seeds were either green or yellow & either wrinkled or round • knew round & yellow were dominant • wrinkled & green were recessive • wondered what would happen in a dihybrid cross • mating GGWW pea with ggww one

  25. Principle of Independent Assortment • f1 generation yielded heterozygous hybrids or RrYy • phenotype was round & yellow • when f1 generation was crossed found distribution of one pair of alleles into gametes did not influence distribution of other pair • genes controlling different traits are inherited independentlyof one another • Principle of IndependentAssortment • ratio was9:3:3:1 • 9 yellow, round, 3 green, round, 3 yellow, wrinkled and one completely recessive pea or green, wrinkled

  26. PunnettSquare

  27. Test Crosses • Used to determine the genotype of a specific specimen • suppose you wanted to determine genotype of a specific organism • you have a purple flowering pea plant • want to know if your pea plant has purple flowers because it is homozygous or heterozygous • unknown plant is mated with known plant • cross purple-flowered unknown with white-flowered plant (completely recessive) • by counting individuals exhibiting each of resulting phenotypes, we could know genotype of unknown • if all offspring exhibited purple flowers we would conclude unknown parent is homozygous • if offspring exhibited 1:1 ratio of purple to white flowers, conclude unknown parent is heterozygous

  28. Family Pedigrees • sometimes, it is possible to determine genotype by evaluating pedigrees • If you know traits of your parents & traits of your grandparents by using Mendelian principles you can predict possible phenotypes of your offspring • you can trace your family tree

  29. Pedigrees

  30. In Class Exercise C c CC Cc ? ? C • c • Cc • c c

  31. Mendelian Pattern Inheritance • genes coding for a particular trait are located at particular positions on chromosomes-loci • come in several forms-alleles • receive one allele from each parent • if identical-homozygous for a trait • if different-heterozygous • recessive traits are not expressed in heterozygotes • for recessive alleles to be expressed, one must have 2 copies • dominant traits can be expressed in presence of another, different allele • dominant alleles prevent expression or mask recessive alleles in heterozygotes. • traits that are result of one set of genes are single gene traits • transmission of single gene traits follows Mendel’s patterns of inheritance

  32. Other Patterns of Inheritance • over 4,500 human trains are known to be inherited according to simple Mendelian principles • there are exceptions to Mendel’s rules

  33. Incomplete dominance • offspring is heterozygous for a trait but phenotype is intermediate between phenotypes of homozygous parents • heterozygous snapdragons of white & red parents have pink flowers • sickle cell disorder • homozygous individuals have either normal blood or sickle cell anemia while heterozygous individuals have sickle cell trait

  34. Incomplete Dominance

  35. Codominance • phenotypes for both alleles at a locus are expressed at same time • human ABO blood system shows both simple Mendelian inheritance & codominance • A & B alleles are dominant to O • if have genotype AOblood type is A • if BOblood type is B • however, neither A or B alleles are dominant to one another • Codominant-both traits are expressed • person with allele for A & one for B has blood type AB • OO = Blood type OAO = Blood type ABO = Blood type BAB = Blood type ABAA = Blood type ABB = Blood type B

  36. Polygenetic Inheritance • characteristics are due to action of multiple alleles. • many genes define a trait • Height • combination of genes for height of face, size of vertebrate & length of leg bones • intelligence & happiness are result of several genes • skin color is due to interactions between at least 3 pairs of alleles • continuous traits • show gradations • there is a series of measurable intermediate forms between 2 extremes

  37. Polygenetic Inheritance & Environment

  38. Linked Genes • sometimes, predictions for dihybrid crosses based on Mendel's principles are violated • number of offspring obtained for each phenotype is significantly different from 9:3:3:1 ratio

  39. Linked Genes • when this occurs-usually because alleles for a given trait are found on same chromosomes • during crossing over during prophase I genes always cross together • genes are said to be linked • genes located close together on chromosomes tend to be inherited together • freckles & red hair

  40. Sex-Linked Genes • characteristics found on X & Y chromosome • inherited differently • X linked, recessive shows effect more in males • Recessive • no corresponding gene on Y chromosome • therefore trait will be expressed

  41. Chromosomes • every nucleus in every somatic or body cell carries genetic blueprint for who we are • 46 chromosomes • each paired with a like chromosome • 23 pairs • 23 chromosomes came from our mothers • 23 from our fathers

  42. Sex Chromosomes • exception found with sex chromosomes • XY chromosomes • other 22 pairs are autosomes • sex chromosomes determine gender • XX = girl & XY = boy

  43. Sex-Linked Traits • sex linkage • results from action of genes present on sex chromosomes • Most are located on X chromosome • nearly all are recessive • most X-linked genes have no homologous loci on Y chromosome • baldness, color blindness & hemophilia • occur more in males than females • males receive only one allele of a gene located on t X chromosome • therefore even recessive alleles will be expressedin males • there is no dominant gene to mask it

  44. Inheritance of Sex-Linked Genes • for sex linked types of traits-females are carriers if have one recessive allele • affected when possess 2 recessive alleles • sex linked characteristics follows predictable patterns of inheritance dependent on sex of offspring • affected fathers pass X-linked allele to all daughters but not to sons • males receive X chromosomes only from mothers • mothers can pass sex-linked alleles to both sons & daughters • unaffected males do not carry defective gene • carrier female has 50% chance of producing affected son • 50% chance of producing carrier daughter • affected females are homozygous-rare • condition requires both carrier mom and father with the condition

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