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Human Genetics
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Earlobe Variation Whether a person is born with attached or detached earlobes depends on a single gene Gene has two molecular forms (alleles)
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Earlobe Variation You inherited one allele for this gene from each parent Dominant allele specifies detached earlobes Recessive allele specifies attached lobes
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Dominant & Recessive Alleles
If you have attached earlobes, you inherited two copies of the recessive allele If you have detached earlobes, you may have either one or two copies of the dominant allele
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Alleles denoted as… shorthand notation to show genes and the two copies of each in a cell Dominant called D- for detached earlobes Recessive called d- for attached earlobes So person can be- DD, Dd or dd
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Gregor Mendel Strong background in plant breeding and mathematics
Using pea plants, found how parents transmit genes (units of information) to offspring
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The Garden Pea Plant Self-pollinating
True breeding (different alleles not introduced) Can be experimentally cross-pollinated
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Genes Units of information about specific traits
Passed from parents to offspring Each has a specific location (locus) on a chromosome
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Alleles Different molecular forms of a gene Arise by mutation
Dominant allele masks a recessive allele that is paired with it
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A pair of homologous chromosomes
A gene locus A pair of alleles Three pairs of genes
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Allele Combinations Homozygous Heterozygous
having two identical alleles at a locus AA or aa Heterozygous having two different alleles at a locus Aa
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Genotype & Phenotype Genotype refers to particular genes an individual carries Phenotype refers to an individual’s observable traits Cannot always determine genotype by observing phenotype
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Tracking Generations Parental generation P mates to produce F1
First-generation offspring F1 mate to produce F2 Second-generation offspring F2
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F1 Results of True-breeding lineages Crossed
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F2 Results of Monohybrid Cross
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Mendel’s Monohybrid Cross Results
5,474 round 1,850 wrinkled 6,022 yellow 2,001 green 882 inflated 299 wrinkled 428 green 152 yellow F2 plants showed dominant-to-recessive ratio that averaged 3:1 705 purple 224 white 651 long stem 207 at tip 787 tall 277 dwarf
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Mendel’s Theory of Segregation
An individual inherits a unit of information (allele) about a trait from each parent During gamete formation, the alleles segregate from each other (meiosis!!)
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Punnett Square of a Monohybrid Cross
Female gametes Male gametes A a A a Aa AA aa Dominant phenotype can arise 3 ways, recessive only one
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Test Cross Individual that shows dominant phenotype is crossed with individual with recessive phenotype Examining offspring allows you to determine the genotype of the dominant individual
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Dihybrid Cross Experimental cross between individuals that are homozygous for different versions of two traits
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A Dihybrid Cross - F1 Results
purple flowers, tall white flowers, dwarf TRUE- BREEDING PARENTS: AABB x aabb GAMETES: AB AB ab ab AaBb F1 HYBRID OFFSPRING: All purple-flowered, tall
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F1 Results of Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses
All plants displayed the dominant form of both traits All plants inherited one allele for each trait from each parent All plants were heterozygous (AaBb)
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Phenotypic Ratios in F2 Four Phenotypes: Tall, purple-flowered (9/16)
AaBb X AaBb Four Phenotypes: Tall, purple-flowered (9/16) Tall, white-flowered (3/16) Dwarf, purple-flowered (3/16) Dwarf, white-flowered (1/16)
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Explanation of Mendel’s Dihybrid Results
If the two traits are coded for by genes on separate chromosomes, sixteen gamete combinations are possible 1/4 1/4 1/4 1/4 AB Ab aB ab 1/4 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/16 AB AABB AABb AaBB AaBb 1/4 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/16 Ab AABb AAbb AaBb Aabb 1/4 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/16 aB AaBB AaBb aaBB aaBb 1/4 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/16 ab AaBb Aabb aaBb aabb
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Independent Assortment
Mendel concluded that the two “units” for the first trait were to be assorted into gametes independently of the two “units” for the other trait
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Impact of Mendel’s Work
Mendel presented his results in 1865 Paper received little notice Mendel discontinued his experiments in 1871 Paper rediscovered in 1900 and finally appreciated
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Dominance Relations Complete dominance Incomplete dominance
Heterozygote phenotype is somewhere between that of two homozyotes Codominance Non-identical alleles specify two phenotypes that are both expressed in heterozygotes
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Flower Color in Snapdragons: Incomplete Dominance
Red-flowered plant X White-flowered plant Pink-flowered F1 plants (homozygote) (homozygote) (heterozygotes)
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Flower Color in Snapdragons: Incomplete Dominance
Pink-flowered plant X Pink-flowered plant White-, pink-, and red-flowered plants in a 1:2:1 ratio (heterozygote) (heterozygote)
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Flower Color in Snapdragons: Incomplete Dominance
Red flowers - two alleles allow them to make a red pigment White flowers - two mutant alleles; can’t make red pigment Pink flowers have one normal and one mutant allele; make a smaller amount of red pigment
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Co-dominance - Multiple alleles
Gene that controls ABO type codes for enzyme that dictates structure of a glycolipid (called A or B) on blood cells 3 alleles total = A gene makes A glycolipid, B gene makes B glycolipid and O gene means neither A nor B genes are present
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ABO Blood Type: Allele Combinations
Type A – AA or Ai Type B – BB or Bi Type AB - AB Type O - ii
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ABO Blood Type: Glycolipids on Red Cells
Type A - Glycolipid A on cell surface Type B - Glycolipid B on cell surface Type AB - Both glyocolipids A & B Type O - Neither glyocolipid A nor B
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Environmental Effects on phenotype
Siamese cats- heat sensitive enzyme works only in cooler areas of the body Height of a person- can have gene for more height but nutrition can also dictate height
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