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Published byΚάρμη Μακρή Modified over 6 years ago
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Gregor Mendel Experimented with pea plants and discovered some patterns of inheritance Genetic Inheritance = passing genetic information from one generation to the next Mendel ( )
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Traits, Genes and Alleles
Trait = an inherited characteristic of a living thing Examples: height and color Gene = a piece of DNA that codes for a protein Example: Gene for purple color in flower petals Allele = different version of a gene (different DNA sequence) Example: Allele for purple protein and white protein
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Mendel’s Crosses
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Mendel’s Crosses Mendel created plants that were pure-bred
Pure-bred plants are plants that have the same traits generation after generation He mated, or crossed, 2 different pure-bred plants to produce hybrids A hybrid is an organism that has two different types of DNA, usually 2 diff. alleles
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Mendel’s Crosses What do you expect in the next generation?
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Mendel’s Principle of Dominance
For some genes, alleles can be dominant or recessive Dominant alleles prevent recessive alleles from being seen (Symbol = Capital Letter) Recessive alleles are only seen when they are the only copies of the gene (Symbol = Lowercase Letter)
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Mendel’s Question: Why did the white flower trait disappear in the F1 generation and re-appear in the F2 generation? What do you expect in the next generation?
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Mendel’s Explanation Each organism has two versions of every gene (2 alleles) 1 allele is received from each parent
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Mendel’s Explanation Gametes are reproductive cells like sperm and eggs
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Mendel’s Explanation When a parent creates gametes, the two alleles segregate, or separate, and enter different gametes Mendel named this idea the Law of Segregation
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Mendel’s Explanation When two hybrids are crossed, ¼ of the offspring will inherit two copies of the recessive allele
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Questions How does the prediction of 3:1 compare to Mendel’s experimental data? Why might there be some differences?
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