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Published byHorace Banks Modified over 9 years ago
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EQ: What controls the inheritance of traits in organisms?
5-1: Mendel’s Work EQ: What controls the inheritance of traits in organisms?
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Previously, in life science…
You learned that DNA in the nucleus of a cell contains the cell’s genetic material. Now, you will see that this genetic material occurs in the form of paired genes.
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1. What is heredity? The passing of traits from parent to offspring.
Ex: parent with blue eyes child with blue eyes.
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2. What is a trait? A physical characteristic How you look
Ex: brown eyes or blue eyes
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3. What is genetics? The study of how traits are inherited.
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4. Who was Gregor Mendel? Known as the Father of Genetics (1850)
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5. Why pea plants? Grow quickly and there are many varieties
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6. What is purebred? Always produces the same trait. “true-breeding”
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7. What was Mendel’s first experiment?
Crossed purebred plants with opposite forms of a trait. Ex: tall × short Results: next generation all tall (no short)
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Ex: purple × white Results: next generation all purple (no white)
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8. What was Mendel’s second experiment?
Then crossed the first generation with itself Ex: tall X tall Results: short trait reappeared! 75% tall, 25% short 3:1 ratio!
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Ex: purple X purple Results: White flowers reappeared! 3:1 ratio
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What did Mendel observe about the F2 plants?
The “lost” form of the trait reappeared in about one-fourth of the plants.
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Summary of Mendel’s Results.
In every one, only one form of the trait appeared in the F1 generation. However, in the F2 generation, the “lost” form of the trait always reappeared in about one fourth of the plants.
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Is yellow seed color controlled by a dominant allele or a recessive allele?
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9. What is a gene? A factor that controls a trait Located on DNA
Ex: gene for plant height gene for eye color
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10. What are alleles? Different forms of a gene
Ex: tall or short plant brown or blue eyes
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11. How many copies do organisms have of each gene?
Two!
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12. Why do genes exist in pairs?
Each parent gives you one set of genes. One from mother, one from father.
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13. What controls the inheritance of traits in organisms?
Traits are determined by the alleles it inherits from its parents. Some alleles are dominant, while other alleles are recessive.
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14. What is a dominant allele?
Trait that always appears when the allele is present. Example: tall plants or brown eyes
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15. How is a dominant allele represented?
With a capital letter. Example: Brown eyes = B Tall Plant = T
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16. What is a recessive allele?
Traits that can be masked or covered up when the dominant allele is present. Example: short plants or blue eyes
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17. How is a recessive allele represented?
With a lower case letter of the dominant allele. Example: blue eyes = b short plants = t
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18. How do you show the alleles?
By writing them side-by-side BB Bb bb
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If an allele is represented by a capital letter, what does this indicate?
It is dominant!
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What combination of alleles must the white rabbit have?
Two recessive alleles!
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Purebred tall stem height = TT
Purebred brown eyes = BB BB
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Purebred short stem height = tt
Purebred blue eyes = bb bb
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Hybrid tall stem height = Tt
Hybrid brown eyes = Bb Bb
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