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Published bySamuel Melton Modified over 9 years ago
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Mendel noticed similar results every time he performed a certain cross. Example: Whenever Mendel crossed two plants that were hybrid for stem length, he always obtained… ¾ of the plants were tall ¼ of the plants were short Probability: the likelihood that an event will occur
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Coin toss example: toss a coin three times. What is the likelihood that it will land heads up 3x in a row? ◦ 2 sides 2 possible outcomes each time there is a 50% chance of it landing on heads (1/2) ◦ Each toss is independent of the results of the others ◦ ½ x ½ x ½ = 1/8 ◦ So, there is a 1/8 chance of flipping heads up 3 times in a row. ◦ Principles of probability can be used to predict outcomes of genetic crosses.
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Diagram used to determine possible outcomes of genetic crosses The possible gametes are placed on the top and left of the square. The F 2 combinations appear in the boxes of the square Example: Tt x Tt ◦ T = dominant for tallness ◦ t = recessive for shortness
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Homozygous – two identical alleles (TT,tt) Heterozygous – two different alleles (Tt) Phenotype – physical characteristics Genotype – genetic makeup/combination of alleles
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The ratios of offspring supported the idea of segregation (separation of possible alleles into gametes). For a cross of two hybrids, the outcome was always ¾ dominant phenotype (TT, Tt, Tt) and ¼ recessive (tt). Ratio was 3:1 In order to have expected ratios, more individuals are better, since probabilities predict a large number of events.
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Genes for different traits can segregate independently during the formation of gametes. Example: Round Yellow x Wrinkled Green RRYY x rryy F 1 generation was all RrYy (What did they look like?)
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Genes for different traits can segregate independently during the formation of gametes. Example: Round Yellow x Wrinkled Green RRYY x rryy F 1 generation was all RrYy (What did they look like?) – Yes! Round Yellow
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When the F 1 was crossed, what happened? Let’s do it together…
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When the F 1 was crossed, what happened? Let’s do it together…
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1. Organisms inherit genes from their parents which determine biological characteristics. 2. Some forms of a gene may be dominant and some may be recessive. 3. In most sexually reproducing organisms, adults have 2 copies of each gene – one from each parent, and these are segregated during gamete formation. 4. Alleles for different genes usually segregate independently of one another.
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