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Genetics and Inheritance © by Dr H – W Winter Pukekohe High School NZ
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Cells & their Nuclei All living things are made up by “cells”, the building blocks of tissue. Most cells have a “nucleus”, the place where the plans (or “blue-prints”) for making the cell (and the rest of the whole organism) are kept.
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Chromosomes The plans for your body (these blue-prints) are called chromosomes. They are pairs of strands of thread-like, very long molecules made of a material called DNA. One of the strands in a pair came from the male, the other from the female sex cell, when the organism was conceived. A pair of chromosomes made from DNA
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Magnifying Details chromosomes in the nucleus one gene a pair of chromosomes made from DNA cell nucleus chromosome inherited from mother chromosome inherited from father
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Magnifying Details 3 5 4 1 2 2 6 7
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Genes On the chromosomes are many tiny units called genes (many thousands). One gene is responsible for one genetic feature. (e.g. tongue rolling or left-handedness etc) Gene for left/right - handedness R r
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Alleles, dominant & recessive If the genetic information from one parent says something different from the other parent, we have 2 different alleles. In our example mother’s allele says: “right handed” and father’s allele says “left-handed”. The “more influential one” of the 2 alleles will win and will be used; it is called the dominant allele; it is given a capital letter (R). The allele that loses the competition is called the recessive allele; it is given a lower case letter (r). In our example right-handedness is dominant over left-handedness, the child is right-handed (but is also a carrier of the allele for left-handedness). Gene for left/right - handedness R r
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Fertilisation at Chromosomal Level A sperm contains 50% of the chromosomes (in blue) An egg contains the other 50% of the chromosomes (in red) Fertilisation: The sperm penetrates the egg and its chromosomes enter – male and female chromosomes pair up, the egg becomes a zygote
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Mitosis Mitosis is the process of making identical copies of cells …. it is used to repair damaged tissue …. and when an organism grows identical copying
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Meiosis Is a 2 stage cell division that makes 4 gametes with half the chromosomes from one normal cell. In this process the alleles from the 2 strands of chromosomes are mixed up to provide the basis for variation. 1 st division after the mother’s and father’s chromosomes were mixed up randomly 2 nd division producing sex cells that are only having half of the chromosomes
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Discontinuous Variation (aka either/or variation or discrete variation) You either have it or you don’t. Examples: left-handedness, gender, tongue rolling, widow’s peak, curly hair etc. Usually expressed as a % value (e.g. 25% of the children of this family cannot roll their tongue). Usually dependent on one gene that has one dominant and one recessive allele.
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Continuous Variation A wide range of values is possible Examples: height, shoe size, hair colour, hand span etc. A “bell-shaped” curve shows the distribution Number of Y 10 students Height of Y 10 students 1.60 m Average height
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Georg Mendel Austrian monk born in 1822 in monastery known for research and teaching after his death (1884) acknowledgment of his discoveries in 1900
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Experiments with Pea Plants - Seed coat colour (gray or white) - Seed shape (round or wrinkled) - Seed colour (yellow or green) - Pod colour (green or yellow) - Flower position (axial or terminal) - Pod shape (inflated or constricted) - Stem length (tall or dwarf)
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Definitions you must know: Homozygous or “true breeding“ means that an organism (like a pea plant) has only one type of alleles in its genetic make-up eg: GG or gg Heterozygous is the opposite to homozygous, 2 different alleles are found in the gene eg: Gg or gG
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Definitions you must know: Genotype describes the genetic make-up of an organism, the allele combinations eg: Gg or gg or GG, heterozygous or homozygous Phenotype describes the appearance of an organism, the looks or type (tongue roller, left-hander, green seed pod, white flower etc)
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Punnet Squares are systematic diagrams to show the statistical probability of either/or variation in the offspring. makes gametes G G Parent 1 (genotype GG) makes gametes Parent 2 (genotype gg) gggg G G gggg gggg
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The thing that puzzled Mendel
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Cross-Pollination of Pure-breed Plants - cross-pollination between homozygous (true breeding) green and yellow pods - all F1 green F1 Generation Gg = heterozygous
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F2 Generation - self-pollination of green F1 plants - ¾ in F2 green, ¼ yellow - 3 : 1 ratio in pod colour in F2 G = dominant = green g = recessive = yellow GG, gg = homozygous
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