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Published byCandice Bradford Modified over 8 years ago
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Where does the variation Darwin observed in populations come from?? GENES!!
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Mendelian Genetics Augustinian Monk Gregor Mendel In the1850s he developed LAWS of inheritance based upon his work with pea plants
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mate 2 purebred peas mate 2 hybrid peas
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Law of Segregation Traits exist in two forms called alleles (we now call them genes) Alleles segregate (separate) during gamete formation and re-join during fertilization
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Mendelian Vocabulary Phenotype = physical characteristic Genotype = genetic compostion, AA, Aa Homozygous = two genes are the same Heterozygous = two genes are different
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Punnett Square
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The Test Cross
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Traits controlled by a dominant allele So only one dominant allele is needed to express the trait. Example: Huntington’s disease inherited disease that causes the progressive breakdown of nerve cells in the brain. It impacts the persons functional abilities and usually results in movement, thinking and psychiatric disorders.
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Self Pollination
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Germinate
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Sex Linked or X Linked Carried on X chromosome of the sex chromosomes. Females XX Male XY More common in Males because Males only have one copy of the X. If he has a mutated gene he has no healthy gene to override it.
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Examples of sex linked Color blindness Hemophilia Muscular dystrophy
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Color blind problem: Cross a man that is color blind with a homozygous female that is not color blind. What are the probability of having a child that is color blind?
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Cross a heterozygous female with a male that is not color blind. What is the probability of having a son that is color blind? What is the probailitiy of having a girl that is color blind?
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A Carrier Is a person that carries the gene but does not exhibit the phenotype
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Being a carrier Disadvantage - can pass on some genetic disorders if both parents are carriers Tay Sachs If sex- linked mom can be a carrier and not know it and pass it on to her sons. muscular dystrophy Advantage- those in Africa that are carriers of the sickle cell trait are immune to Malaria
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Modern Inheritance Patterns Incomplete Dominance Ex. Snapdragons Having 2 Red alleles produce more color than those with only one allele
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Co-Dominance Another example: Roan color
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Multiple Alleles 3 possible alleles, A, B, and i
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Dihybrid Cross
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Look at One Trait at a Time
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Pleiotrophy One gene has multiple effects…
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Epistasis More than one gene needed to produce a single trait. Ex. In mice… B = black coat b = brown coat C = melanin deposted c = no melanin deposited
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Polygenic Inheritance Many genes effect a genotype ex. If human skin color was controlled by 3 genes… A, B, C – dark a, b, c - light
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Environmental Effects
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