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More of Mendel
What we know…
1. Inheritance of biological characteristics
   is determined by genes
2. Principle of Dominance
  –   When there are two or more alleles for a
      gene, some are dominant while others are
      recessive
3. Law of Segregation
  –   In sexually reproducing organisms, adult cells
      have two copies of each gene—one from each
      parent; these genes segregate when
      GAMETES are formed
Does the segregation of 1
 pair of alleles affect the
segregation of another pair
         of alleles?
• Let’s look at Pea shape and pea color
  – Round (R) vs. wrinkled (r)
  – Yellow (Y) vs. green (y)
• Remember, there are 4 possible gametes
• If a parent is homozygous dominant (true-
  breeding dominant) for both shape and color,
  what will all possible gametes be?
• If a parent is homozygous recessive (true-
  breeding recessive) for both shape and
  color, what will all possible gametes be?
Make a test cross of:
 •True breeding Round Yellow Peas
          •Genotype (RRYY)
•True breeding Wrinkled Green peas
           •Genotype (rryy)



          ry      ry        ry       ry

    RY


    RY


    RY


    RY
• What is the phenotype of the F1
  offspring?
• What is the genotype of the F1
  offspring?
What this first cross
        told us…
• All F1 offspring were heterozygous for
  seed shape (round) and seed color (yellow)
  RrYy
• The F1 plant was made from fusing a
  gamete carrying RY and a gamete carrying
  ry
• Will the dominant alleles stay together or
  separate when making the F2 offspring?
Now cross these hybrid
(RrYy) plants on a new 4X4
     Punnett Square
What does the F2 cross
        tell us?
• Are there combinations of alleles that we
  did not see in either of the parents?
• This means that the alleles for seed color
  separated independently than the alleles
  for seed shape
• Genes that segregate separately do NOT
  influence each other’s inheritance
Principle of Independent
       Assortment
• Genes for different traits can
  segregate independently during the
  formation of gametes. This principle
  helps account for many genetic
  variations in plants, animals and other
  organisms.
Mendel’s 4 Principle’s
1. Inheritance of biological
   characteristics is determined by
   genes
2. Principle of Dominance
3. Law of Segregation
4. Principle of Independent
   Assortment
Exceptions to Mendel
• Genetics more complicated
• Some alleles are neither dominant
  nor recessive
• Many traits are controlled by
  multiple alleles or multiple genes
Incomplete Dominance
• When red flowered (CRCR) plants were
  crossed with white flowered (CWCW) plants
  they made…pink flowers (CRCW)
• Which allele is dominant?
  – neither
• Incomplete dominance:
  – Case in which one allele is not dominant over
    another
  – The heterozygous phenotype is somewhere
    between the two homozygous phenotypes
Codominance
• Both alleles contribute to the phenotype
• Chickens
   – Allele for black feathers is codominant with allele for
     white feathers
   – Chicken looks speckled with black and white feathers
   – Not like the blending of dominant phenotypes…
   – BOTH dominant phenotypes show up
• In humans
   – Gene for protein that controls cholesterol levels in the
     blood
   – People with heterozygous form make both types of protien
Multiple Alleles
• When a gene has more than two alleles
• NOT more than 2 alleles for a person but MORE than 2 alleles for the
  trait exist
• Coat color in rabbits
   – A single gene for coat color
   – At least 4 different alleles
   – Simple dominance and make 4 possible coat colors
• Genes for human blood type
   – 3 different alleles: IA, IB, I
       • You can get different genotypes:
           –   IAIA
           –   IAi
           –   IAIB
           –   IBIB
           –   I bi
           –   ii
       • You can get different Phenotypes:
           –   Type A (dom)
           –   Type B (dom)
           –   Type AB (dom)
           –   Type O (recessive)
Polygenic Traits
•   ―Poly‖ many
•   ―-genic‖ genes
•   Traits controlled by two or more genes
•   Several genes interact to produce a trait
•   Wide range of phenotypes
•   Skin color
    – Four different genes
• Fruit Fly eye color
    – Three genes make the reddish brown pigment
Epistasis
• When the expression of one gene effects the expression of
  another gene
• Ex. Fur color in mice…controlled by 2 separate genes
   – Gene 1
       • Brown fur pigment (BB or Bb) is dominant over gray fur
         pigment (bb)
   – Gene 2
       • Coat Pigment depositing gene
       • Dominant gene (CC or Cc) means fur will get pigment and
         this is determined by gene one
       • Recessive gene (cc) means that no pigment will be
         deposited on fur…whether the they have the gene for
         black or brown fur
       • The gene for Pigment Deposition is the EPISTATIC gene
         because it alters the Phenotypic ration

• Sd
Homework
• Complete a Dihybrid cross for 2 mice
  that are heterozygous for both
  Brown fur (Bb) and Pigment
  deposition (Pp)
• Predict your phenotypic ratio…
• What are you final phenotypic ratios?
• Write a paragraph explaining your
  results.
Genes and the
          Environment
• Genes provide the plan for development
• How the plan unfolds depends on the
  environment
• Example:
  – Sunflower has genes for height and color of
    flowers
  – But these traits are also influenced by climate,
    soil conditions and water availability
Genes
Applying Mendel’s
   Principles…
• Apply Mendel’s Principles to many
  organisms, including humans
• Thomas Hunt Morgan (1900’s)
   – American geneticist
   – Common fruit fly
      • Drosophilia melanogaster
      • Produced offspring very quickly
      • Single pair of flies=100 offspring
• Mendel’s principle’s were tested with
  Drosophilia and many other organisms and
  they applied to all of them as well
• Would genes on the same
 chromosome be inherited together?
• Thomas noticed that almost every
  single time he crossed two flies that
  each had red eyes and mini wings, the
  offspring almost always inherited
  BOTH red eyes and mini wings
  – This went against Mendel’s Principle of
    Independent Assortment…(review!)
Gene Linkage
• Thomas Hunt Morgan gave us the answer
  – 1910 PRINCIPLE of LINKAGE
  – 50 Drosophilia genes
  – Seemed to contradict Principle of Independent
    Assortment b/c certain genes were always
    inherited together
  – He grouped the fly’s genes into linkage groups
• Linkage groups are made up of genes
  that seem to be inherited together
• Linkage groups assort independently
  but all genes in one group are
  inherited together
• Drosophilia
  – 4 linkage groups
  – 4 chromosomes
• What can be concluded?
Conclusions
1. Each chromosome is actually a group of linked
   genes
2. Mendel’s Principle of Independent Assortment
   holds true but an adjustment needs to be
   made…
       IT IS THE CHROMOSOMES THAT
      ASSORT INDEPENDENTLY, NOT THE
             INDIVIDUAL GENES
How Mendel missed it…
• What 7 genes did he study?
• 6 of the 7 genes were on different
  chromosomes
• Two genes were on the same
  chromosome but they were so far
  apart on the same chromosome that
  they assorted independently
• If two genes are on the
  same chromosome, does
  that mean they are linked
  for ever?
  – No, chromosomes cross
    over during meiosis so
    they can separate
  – Crossing over produces
    new combinations of
    alleles
  – Important for genetic
    diversity
Lucky Student
•   Alfred Sturtevant 1911
•   Columbia University
•   Worked in Morgan’s Lab
•   Hypothesis
    – If two genes are farther apart on a chromosome, the
      they are more likely to be separated during meiosis
• Experiment
    – Measured the rate at which linked genes were separated
      and recombined to make a ―map‖ of distances between
      genes
• Conclusion
    – Recombination rates could be used to make gene maps
    – Gene maps showed the location of a gene on a
      chromosome
Gene Linkage and
           Crossing Over
• The farther apart 2 genes are on a
  chromosome….
  – The more likely they are to ―cross-over‖
• The closer two genes are on the same
  chromosome…
  – The less likely they are to be separated
1.
                 Steps for Dihybrid cross
          Make a Key
     1.         Trait 1: height
           1.       Dominant phenotype: Tall TT or Tt (ways to get
                    it)
           2.       Recessive phenotype: Short tt
     2.         Trait2: color
           1.
           2.
                    Dominant phenotype: Purple
                    Recessive phenotype: White pp
                                                 PP or Pp
                                                                     •   Dominant- capital letter D
           3.       Write out genotypes for each parent              •   Recessive- lower case d
     3.         ____x____
2.        Write Out Gametes for each Parent (use
                                                                     •   Homozygous-
          arrows)                                                         – 2 of the same size letter
     1.         4 gametes for each parent (_ _)                           – If its two little letters
3.        Make Punnett Square (16) boxes                                    recessive dd
     1.         Label parent one and write gametes along top
     2.         Label Parent 2 and write their gametes on side            – If its 2 big letters it is
     3.         Fill in each box (should have 4 letters)                    dominant DD
4.        Tally genotypes                                            •   Heterozygous-
5.        Write out 4 possible phenotypic combinations
     1.         Dominant trait 1 and dominant for trait
                                                                          – 2 different size letters
                2:______                                                    (capital and lowercase) Dd
     2.         Dominant trait 1 and recessive trait 2:_______            – ALWAYS dominant
     3.         Recessive trait 1 and Dominant trait 2:_______
     4.         Recessive trait 1 and recessive trait 2:________
6.        Tally Phenotypes (should =16)
7.        Write phenotypic ratio
     1.         __dd__:__dr__:__rd__:__rr__
Genetics part 2

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Genetics part 2

  • 2. What we know… 1. Inheritance of biological characteristics is determined by genes 2. Principle of Dominance – When there are two or more alleles for a gene, some are dominant while others are recessive 3. Law of Segregation – In sexually reproducing organisms, adult cells have two copies of each gene—one from each parent; these genes segregate when GAMETES are formed
  • 3. Does the segregation of 1 pair of alleles affect the segregation of another pair of alleles?
  • 4. • Let’s look at Pea shape and pea color – Round (R) vs. wrinkled (r) – Yellow (Y) vs. green (y) • Remember, there are 4 possible gametes • If a parent is homozygous dominant (true- breeding dominant) for both shape and color, what will all possible gametes be? • If a parent is homozygous recessive (true- breeding recessive) for both shape and color, what will all possible gametes be?
  • 5. Make a test cross of: •True breeding Round Yellow Peas •Genotype (RRYY) •True breeding Wrinkled Green peas •Genotype (rryy) ry ry ry ry RY RY RY RY
  • 6. • What is the phenotype of the F1 offspring? • What is the genotype of the F1 offspring?
  • 7. What this first cross told us… • All F1 offspring were heterozygous for seed shape (round) and seed color (yellow) RrYy • The F1 plant was made from fusing a gamete carrying RY and a gamete carrying ry • Will the dominant alleles stay together or separate when making the F2 offspring?
  • 8. Now cross these hybrid (RrYy) plants on a new 4X4 Punnett Square
  • 9.
  • 10. What does the F2 cross tell us? • Are there combinations of alleles that we did not see in either of the parents? • This means that the alleles for seed color separated independently than the alleles for seed shape • Genes that segregate separately do NOT influence each other’s inheritance
  • 11. Principle of Independent Assortment • Genes for different traits can segregate independently during the formation of gametes. This principle helps account for many genetic variations in plants, animals and other organisms.
  • 12. Mendel’s 4 Principle’s 1. Inheritance of biological characteristics is determined by genes 2. Principle of Dominance 3. Law of Segregation 4. Principle of Independent Assortment
  • 13. Exceptions to Mendel • Genetics more complicated • Some alleles are neither dominant nor recessive • Many traits are controlled by multiple alleles or multiple genes
  • 14. Incomplete Dominance • When red flowered (CRCR) plants were crossed with white flowered (CWCW) plants they made…pink flowers (CRCW) • Which allele is dominant? – neither • Incomplete dominance: – Case in which one allele is not dominant over another – The heterozygous phenotype is somewhere between the two homozygous phenotypes
  • 15.
  • 16. Codominance • Both alleles contribute to the phenotype • Chickens – Allele for black feathers is codominant with allele for white feathers – Chicken looks speckled with black and white feathers – Not like the blending of dominant phenotypes… – BOTH dominant phenotypes show up • In humans – Gene for protein that controls cholesterol levels in the blood – People with heterozygous form make both types of protien
  • 17.
  • 18. Multiple Alleles • When a gene has more than two alleles • NOT more than 2 alleles for a person but MORE than 2 alleles for the trait exist • Coat color in rabbits – A single gene for coat color – At least 4 different alleles – Simple dominance and make 4 possible coat colors • Genes for human blood type – 3 different alleles: IA, IB, I • You can get different genotypes: – IAIA – IAi – IAIB – IBIB – I bi – ii • You can get different Phenotypes: – Type A (dom) – Type B (dom) – Type AB (dom) – Type O (recessive)
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21.
  • 22.
  • 23. Polygenic Traits • ―Poly‖ many • ―-genic‖ genes • Traits controlled by two or more genes • Several genes interact to produce a trait • Wide range of phenotypes • Skin color – Four different genes • Fruit Fly eye color – Three genes make the reddish brown pigment
  • 24.
  • 25. Epistasis • When the expression of one gene effects the expression of another gene • Ex. Fur color in mice…controlled by 2 separate genes – Gene 1 • Brown fur pigment (BB or Bb) is dominant over gray fur pigment (bb) – Gene 2 • Coat Pigment depositing gene • Dominant gene (CC or Cc) means fur will get pigment and this is determined by gene one • Recessive gene (cc) means that no pigment will be deposited on fur…whether the they have the gene for black or brown fur • The gene for Pigment Deposition is the EPISTATIC gene because it alters the Phenotypic ration • Sd
  • 26. Homework • Complete a Dihybrid cross for 2 mice that are heterozygous for both Brown fur (Bb) and Pigment deposition (Pp) • Predict your phenotypic ratio… • What are you final phenotypic ratios? • Write a paragraph explaining your results.
  • 27.
  • 28. Genes and the Environment • Genes provide the plan for development • How the plan unfolds depends on the environment • Example: – Sunflower has genes for height and color of flowers – But these traits are also influenced by climate, soil conditions and water availability
  • 29.
  • 30. Genes
  • 31. Applying Mendel’s Principles… • Apply Mendel’s Principles to many organisms, including humans • Thomas Hunt Morgan (1900’s) – American geneticist – Common fruit fly • Drosophilia melanogaster • Produced offspring very quickly • Single pair of flies=100 offspring • Mendel’s principle’s were tested with Drosophilia and many other organisms and they applied to all of them as well
  • 32. • Would genes on the same chromosome be inherited together? • Thomas noticed that almost every single time he crossed two flies that each had red eyes and mini wings, the offspring almost always inherited BOTH red eyes and mini wings – This went against Mendel’s Principle of Independent Assortment…(review!)
  • 33. Gene Linkage • Thomas Hunt Morgan gave us the answer – 1910 PRINCIPLE of LINKAGE – 50 Drosophilia genes – Seemed to contradict Principle of Independent Assortment b/c certain genes were always inherited together – He grouped the fly’s genes into linkage groups
  • 34. • Linkage groups are made up of genes that seem to be inherited together • Linkage groups assort independently but all genes in one group are inherited together • Drosophilia – 4 linkage groups – 4 chromosomes • What can be concluded?
  • 35.
  • 36. Conclusions 1. Each chromosome is actually a group of linked genes 2. Mendel’s Principle of Independent Assortment holds true but an adjustment needs to be made… IT IS THE CHROMOSOMES THAT ASSORT INDEPENDENTLY, NOT THE INDIVIDUAL GENES
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  • 39. How Mendel missed it… • What 7 genes did he study? • 6 of the 7 genes were on different chromosomes • Two genes were on the same chromosome but they were so far apart on the same chromosome that they assorted independently
  • 40. • If two genes are on the same chromosome, does that mean they are linked for ever? – No, chromosomes cross over during meiosis so they can separate – Crossing over produces new combinations of alleles – Important for genetic diversity
  • 41. Lucky Student • Alfred Sturtevant 1911 • Columbia University • Worked in Morgan’s Lab • Hypothesis – If two genes are farther apart on a chromosome, the they are more likely to be separated during meiosis • Experiment – Measured the rate at which linked genes were separated and recombined to make a ―map‖ of distances between genes • Conclusion – Recombination rates could be used to make gene maps – Gene maps showed the location of a gene on a chromosome
  • 42. Gene Linkage and Crossing Over • The farther apart 2 genes are on a chromosome…. – The more likely they are to ―cross-over‖ • The closer two genes are on the same chromosome… – The less likely they are to be separated
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  • 46.
  • 47. 1. Steps for Dihybrid cross Make a Key 1. Trait 1: height 1. Dominant phenotype: Tall TT or Tt (ways to get it) 2. Recessive phenotype: Short tt 2. Trait2: color 1. 2. Dominant phenotype: Purple Recessive phenotype: White pp PP or Pp • Dominant- capital letter D 3. Write out genotypes for each parent • Recessive- lower case d 3. ____x____ 2. Write Out Gametes for each Parent (use • Homozygous- arrows) – 2 of the same size letter 1. 4 gametes for each parent (_ _) – If its two little letters 3. Make Punnett Square (16) boxes recessive dd 1. Label parent one and write gametes along top 2. Label Parent 2 and write their gametes on side – If its 2 big letters it is 3. Fill in each box (should have 4 letters) dominant DD 4. Tally genotypes • Heterozygous- 5. Write out 4 possible phenotypic combinations 1. Dominant trait 1 and dominant for trait – 2 different size letters 2:______ (capital and lowercase) Dd 2. Dominant trait 1 and recessive trait 2:_______ – ALWAYS dominant 3. Recessive trait 1 and Dominant trait 2:_______ 4. Recessive trait 1 and recessive trait 2:________ 6. Tally Phenotypes (should =16) 7. Write phenotypic ratio 1. __dd__:__dr__:__rd__:__rr__