Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRuby Patterson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Warm Up In pea plants round seeds (R) are dominant to wrinkled seeds (r) and yellow seed color (Y) is dominant to green seed color (y). If a plant heterozygous for both is crossed with a plant that has wrinkled, green seeds, what is the phenotypic ratio of their offspring?
2
Beyond Dominant and Recessive Alleles
3
Beyond Mendel Despite the importance of Mendel’s work, there are important exceptions to most of his principles. Some alleles are neither dominant nor recessive, and many traits are controlled by multiple alleles or multiple genes.
4
Incomplete Dominance When one crosses two four o’clock plants (Miarabilis), the F1 generation cross between a red-flowered (RR) plant and a white- flowered (WW) plant, consists of pink-flowerd (RW) plants.
5
Incomplete Dominance Which allele is dominant? Neither. Cases in which one allele is not dominant over another are called incomplete dominance. The heterozygous phenotype is in between the two homozygous phenotypes.
6
Codominance In codominance, both alleles contribute to phenotype. Example: human bloodtypes have two alleles. One for “A” and one “B” People with Type A blood have two alleles for “A” or one “A” and one i.
7
Codominance Codominance is when alleles share in dominance. – A calico cat is part white cat and part colored cat. In shorthorn cattle, when a red bull (RR) is crossed with a white cow (WW), all the offspring are roan—a spotted, red and white or milky red color.
8
Multiple Alleles Many genes have more than two alleles are said to have multiple alleles. A common example is coat color in rabbits. Their color is determined by a gene that has at least four different alleles. Human blood type is also multiple allelic, meaning that there are three possible alleles, A, B, and i (ii causes O type blood)
9
Multiple Alleles
10
Polygenic Traits Many traits are produced by the interaction of several genes. Traits controlled by two or more genes are said to be polygenic traits. Skin color in humans is caused by multiple genes that code for melanin in the skin. Many genetic disorders are polygenic such as autism, diabetes, and cancer.
11
T.H. Morgan Lexingtonian Thomas Hunt Morgan worked on the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. Morgan showed that Mendel’s principles applied to animals and not just pea plants. He was the first Kentuckian (and only… for now) to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine. He was awarded this for determining that some traits were sex-linked and found on sex chromosomes. We’ll discuss this more later
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.