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Published byIsabella Flowers Modified over 8 years ago
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Genetics The Wonder of Heredity
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What is Genetics? Genetics is the study of heredity Heredity is the passing of traits from parents to offspring First studied by Gregor Mendel
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Gregor Mendel Considered “Father of Genetics” Studied pea plants Noted that traits of offspring were similar to parents Mendel worked with true-breeding (pure) lines of plants produce identical offspring to parent plant Self-pollinate
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Mendel traced 7 basic characteristics of pea plants Each of the seven traits had two contrasting characters
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Mendel crossed different true-breeding plants for each of the seven traits Called these the P generation (parental) Offspring of these crosses are the F1 “first filial” generation Hybrids He then crossed two of the F1 generation to create the F2 generation “second filial”
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Results The F1 generation always displayed one trait (dominant) The F2 showed both traits, usually in a 3:1 ratio
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Mendel’s Principles (or Laws) Principle of Dominance Some “factors” or alleles can mask over others and are dominant Principle of Segregation The two alleles for a trait separate during gamete formation Principle of Independent Assortment Alleles for a trait separate independently from each other Each trait is independently inherited
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Work led to the discovery of Genes and alleles Dominant and recessive traits Genotype and phenotype Concept of homozygous and heterozygous
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Genes and Alleles Genes -- factors that control our traits; units of heredity Found on chromosomes Alleles -- different forms of a gene Mendel called them “factors” Offspring get one allele from each parent Example: allele for a widow’s peak or an allele for no widow’s peak
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Dominant vs. Recessive Dominant alleles: particular trait will always be seen as long as the dominant allele is present Represented by a capital letter Recessive alleles: can be masked by dominant allele Particular trait will only be seen if two recessive alleles are present Represented by a lowercase letter
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Common Dominant Traits Widow’s Peak Rolling your Tongue Cleft Chin Polydactyly ( 6 fingers and toes) Dimples Freckles Unattached Ears Brown Eyes
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Genotype and Phenotype Genotype – describes an organism’s genetic make-up and shows the actual allele combinations (the letters!) Examples: AA, Aa, or aa Phenotype – describes an organism’s physical appearance or traits Examples – blue or brown eyes, purple or white flowers, cleft chin or no cleft chin
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Homozygous vs. Heterozygous Describe the genotype!!! Homozygous – refers to an organism that has two identical alleles for a trait (“homo” means the same) Examples: AA (homozygous dominant) aa (homozygous recessive) Heterozygous – refers to an organism that has two different alleles for a trait (“hetero” means different) Example: Aa
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Examples of Genotype and Phenotype GenotypeHomozygous/ Heterozygous Phenotype WWHomozygous Dominant Widow’s Peak WwHeterozygousWidow’s Peak wwHomozygous Recessive No Widow’s Peak
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Other types of expression… Not all alleles have a simple pattern of dominant and recessive Majority of genes have more than two alleles Many traits are controlled by more than one gene
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Incomplete Dominance Neither allele is completely dominant See a blending of traits (phenotype) Example: Red flower X white flower = pink flowers
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Codominance Both alleles are dominant See both traits (phenotype) Ex: Red x white = Red and White
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Multiple Alleles Many genes have more than two possible alleles Individual still only get two, just more variety of combinations Ex: human blood types A, B, or O allele More possible phenotypes
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Polygenic Traits Traits controlled by two or more genes Can show wide range of phenotypes Ex: eye color, skin tone, height and weight
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Polygenic Traits
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Environment Characteristics and traits do not solely depend on genes Traits are also influenced by environment Traits such as height, personality, and weight, are variable due to circumstance and experiences
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