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Punnett Square Notes
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What is Genetics? Genetics is the scientific study of heredity
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What is a Trait? A trait is a specific characteristic that varies from one individual to another. Examples: Brown hair, blue eyes, tall, curly
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What is an Allele? Alleles are the different possibilities for a given trait. Every trait has at least two alleles (one from the mother and one from the father) Example: Eye color – Brown, blue, green, hazel Examples of Alleles: A = Brown Eyes a = Blue Eyes B = Green Eyes b = Hazel Eyes
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What are Genes? Genes are the sequence of DNA that codes for a protein and thus determines a trait.
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Gregor Mendel Father of Genetics 1st important studies of heredity
Identified specific traits in the garden pea and studied them from one generation to another
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Mendel’s Conclusions Law of Segregation – Two alleles for each trait separate when gametes form; Parents pass only one allele for each trait to each offspring Law of Independent Assortment – Genes for different traits are inherited independently of each other
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R r Dominant vs. Recessive
Dominant - Masks the other trait; the trait that shows if present Represented by a capital letter Recessive – An organism with a recessive allele for a particular trait will only exhibit that trait when the dominant allele is not present; Will only show if both alleles are present Represented by a lower case letter R r
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Dominant & Recessive Practice
TT - Represent offspring with straight hair Tt - Represent offspring with straight hair tt - Represents offspring with curly hair T – straight hair t - curly hair
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Genotype vs. Phenotype Genotype – The genetic makeup of an organism; The gene (or allele) combination an organism has. Example: Tt, ss, GG, Ww Phenotype – The physical characteristics of an organism; The way an organism looks Example: Curly hair, straight hair, blue eyes, tall, green
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Homozygous vs. Heterozygous
Homozygous – Term used to refer to an organism that has two identical alleles for a particular trait (TT or tt) Heterozygous - Term used to refer to an organism that has two different alleles for the same trait (Tt) RR rr Rr
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Punnett Squares Punnett Square – Diagram showing the gene combinations that might result from a genetic cross Used to calculate the probability of inheriting a particular trait Probability – The chance that a given event will occur
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Punnett Square Parent Offspring Parent
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How to Complete a Punnett Square
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Y-Yellow y-white Genotype: 1:2:1 (YY:Yy:yy) Phenotype: 3 Yellow 1 White
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You Try It Now! Give the genotype and phenotype for the following cross: TT x tt (T = Tall and t = Short)
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TT x tt Step One: Set Up Punnett Square (put one parent on the top and the other along the side) T T t
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TT x tt Step Two: Complete the Punnett Square T T t Tt
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TT x tt Tt t Genotype: 4 - Tt Phenotype: 100% Tall
Step Three: Write the genotype and phenotype T T t Genotype: 4 - Tt Phenotype: 100% Tall Tt Remember: Each box is 25%
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You Try It Now! Give the genotype and phenotype for the following cross: Tt x tt
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Tt x tt Step One: Set Up Punnett Square (put one parent on the top and the other along the side) T t t
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Tt x tt Step Two: Complete the Punnett Square T t t Tt tt
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Tt x tt Tt tt t Genotype: Tt - 2 (50%) tt - 2 (50%) Phenotype:
Step Two: Complete the Punnett Square T t t Genotype: Tt - 2 (50%) tt - 2 (50%) Phenotype: 50% Tall 50% Short Tt tt Remember: Each box is 25%
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