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From Genes to Phenotypes Part I: Gene structure and RNA replication From Chapter 10, Human Genetics Concepts and Applications, 6 th edition by Ricki Lewis
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Who was Mendel? - Austrian monk - Background in agriculture (grew up on a farm) - Failed his teacher’s exam - University of Vienna: math, causes of variation in plants - Teaching at the Brünn Modern School
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What did he do? Pea breeding Testing mechanisms of inheritance Used many different characters Published results in 1865
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Mendel’s pea plants
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Mendel`s Traits; These have controlled by two genes Genes located on autosomes chromosomes. It have shown by two form allelels; dominance & resecive. Monohybridism Testing
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To create hybrid plants, Mendel snipped off the male stamens from the reproductive organs to prevent self-fertilization. He then used a paintbrush to transfer pollen from another plant for fertilization.
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Why did his experiments succeed? Control over fertilization Multiple generations: P, F 1, F 2 True breedin g parents “Either/or” characters
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ParentalPP ×pp Parental:PP ×pp Purple White GametesP onlyp only Gametes:P onlyp only Fusion of Gametes ? Can we make a Punnett square?
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F2 Parental:P p×P p Gametes: P p P p Gives us:P p Pp Now let’s allow the F1 generation to self- fertilize to get an F2 generation. The F1 products of meiosis assort independently *We’ll use these gamete types to make a Punnett square
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PPPp Pppp Pp P p 3:1 Phenotypic ratio 1:2:1 Genotypic ratio F2 Sperm Eggs
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When hybrid plants produce gametes, the two parental factors segregate: half the gametes get one type, half get the other type. 3. Law of segregation All possible combinations, random combinations
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DNA Functions 1. Storage of genetic information 2. Self-duplication & inheritance. 3. Expression of the genetic message. DNA’s major function is to code for proteins. Information is encoded in the order of the nitrogenous bases.
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Nucleotide structure of DNA Each nucleotide of DNA contains: –Deoxyribose –Phosphate –Nitrogen base (either A, G, C, T)
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What is DNA? DNA = deoxyribonucleic acid –composed of phosphate, deoxyribose sugar and four different nitrogenous bases (A, T, C, G) RNA = ribonucleic acid –Composed of phosphate, ribose sugar, and four different nitrogenous bases (A, U, C, G) DNA and RNA very similar, though RNA is generally single stranded
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DNA is a double helix P A P C P G P T P C P G P A P C P T G P P C P A sugar and phosphate “backbone” connects nucleotides in a chain. P G P Two nucleotide chains together wind into a helix. DNA strands are antiparallel. DNA has directionality. 5’ 3’ 5’ Hydrogen bonds between paired bases hold the two DNA strands together.
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A brief history of DNA… Edward Chargaff Showed that DNA from several species contains equal amounts of A and T, and equal amounts of G and C (1950s) Chargaff’s rules: %A=%T %G=%C 1 purine: 1 pyrimidine
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Chargaff
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II. What did Mendel find? A. Law of segregation (of alleles) B. Law of independent assortment (of traits)
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What is a testcross? We use a testcross to determine the genotype of an organism that displays an ambiguous phenotype; That is, a purple-flowered pea plant can have either the PP genotype or the Pp genotype We can cross the purple-flowered plant with a homozygous recessive plant—a white one with a genotype that is known
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