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Chapter 14 Mendel and the Gene Idea
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Inheritance u The passing of traits from parents to offspring. u Humans have known about inheritance for thousands of years.
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Genetics u The scientific study of the inheritance. u Genetics is a relatively “new” science (about 150 years).
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Genetic Theories 1. Blending Theory - traits were like paints and mixed evenly from both parents. 2. Incubation Theory - only one parent controlled the traits of the children. Ex: Spermists and Ovists
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3. Particulate Model - parents pass on traits as discrete units that retain their identities in the offspring.
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Gregor Mendel u Father of Modern Genetics.
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Years u Mendel’s paper published in 1866, but was not recognized by Science until the early 1900’s.
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Reasons for Mendel's Success u Used an experimental approach. u Applied mathematics to the study of natural phenomena. u Kept good records.
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me u Mendel was a pea picker. u He used peas as his study organism.
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Why Use Peas? u Short life span. u Bisexual. u Many traits known. u Cross- and self-pollinating. u (You can eat the failures).
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Cross-pollination u Two parents. u Results in hybrid offspring where the offspring may be different than the parents.
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Self-pollination u One flower as both parents. u Natural event in peas. u Results in pure-bred offspring where the offspring are identical to the parents.
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Mendel's Work u Used seven characters, each with two expressions or traits. u Example: u Character - height u Traits - tall or short.
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Monohybrid or Mendelian Crosses u Crosses that work with a single character at a time. Example - Tall X short
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P Generation u The Parental generation or the first two individuals used in a cross. Example - Tall X short u Mendel used reciprocal crosses, where the parents alternated for the trait.
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Offspring u F1 - first filial generation. u F2 - second filial generation, bred by crossing two F1 plants together or allowing a F1 to self-pollinate.
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Another Sample Cross P1 Tall X short (TT x tt) F1 all Tall (Tt) F2 3 tall to 1 short (1 TT: 2 Tt: 1 tt)
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Results - Summary In all crosses, the F1 generation showed only one of the traits regardless of which was male or female. u The other trait reappeared in the F2 at ~25% (3:1 ratio).
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Mendel's Hypothesis 1. Genes can have alternate versions called alleles. 2. Each offspring inherits two alleles, one from each parent.
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Mendel's Hypothesis 3. If the two alleles differ, the dominant allele is expressed. The recessive allele remains hidden unless the dominant allele is absent. Comment - do not use the terms “strongest” to describe the dominant allele.
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Mendel's Hypothesis 4. The two alleles for each trait separate during gamete formation. This now called: Mendel's Law of Segregation
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Law of Segregation
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Mendel’s Experiments u Showed that the Particulate Model best fit the results.
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Vocabulary u Phenotype - the physical appearance of the organism. u Genotype - the genetic makeup of the organism, usually shown in a code. u T = tall u t = short
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Helpful Vocabulary u Homozygous - When the two alleles are the same (TT/tt). u Heterozygous- When the two alleles are different (Tt).
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6 Mendelian Crosses are Possible Cross Genotype Phenotype TT X tt all Tt all Dom Tt X Tt 1TT:2Tt:1tt 3 Dom: 1 Res TT X TT all TT all Dom tt X tt all tt all Res TT X Tt 1TT:1Tt all Dom Tt X tt 1Tt:1tt 1 Dom: 1 Res
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Test Cross u Cross of a suspected heterozygote with a homozygous recessive. u Ex: T_ X tt If TT - all dominant If Tt - 1 Dominant: 1 Recessive
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Dihybrid Cross u Cross with two genetic traits. u Need 4 letters to code for the cross. u Ex: TtRr u Each Gamete - Must get 1 letter for each trait. u Ex. TR, Tr, etc.
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Number of Kinds of Gametes u Critical to calculating the results of higher level crosses. u Look for the number of heterozygous traits.
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Equation The formula 2 n can be used, where “n” = the number of heterozygous traits. Ex: TtRr, n=2 2 2 or 4 different kinds of gametes are possible. TR, tR, Tr, tr
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Dihybrid Cross TtRr X TtRr Each parent can produce 4 types of gametes. TR, Tr, tR, tr Cross is a 4 X 4 with 16 possible offspring.
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Results u 9 Tall, Red flowered u 3 Tall, white flowered u 3 short, Red flowered u 1 short, white flowered Or: 9:3:3:1
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Law of Independent Assortment u The inheritance of 1st genetic trait is NOT dependent on the inheritance of the 2 nd trait. u Inheritance of height is independent of the inheritance of flower color.
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Comment u Ratio of Tall to short is 3:1 u Ratio of Red to white is 3:1 u The cross is really a product of the ratio of each trait multiplied together. (3:1) X (3:1)
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Probability u Genetics is a specific application of the rules of probability. u Probability - the chance that an event will occur out of the total number of possible events.
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Genetic Ratios u The monohybrid “ratios” are actually the “probabilities” of the results of random fertilization. Ex: 3:1 75% chance of the dominant 25% chance of the recessive
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Rule of Multiplication u The probability that two alleles will come together at fertilization, is equal to the product of their separate probabilities.
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Example: TtRr X TtRr u The probability of getting a tall offspring is ¾. u The probability of getting a red offspring is ¾. u The probability of getting a tall red offspring is ¾ x ¾ = 9/16
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Comment u Use the Product Rule to calculate the results of complex crosses rather than work out the Punnett Squares. u Ex: TtrrGG X TtRrgg
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Solution “T’s” = Tt X Tt = 3:1 “R’s” = rr X Rr = 1:1 “G’s” = GG x gg = 1:0 Product is: (3:1) X (1:1) X (1:0 ) = 3:3:1:1
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Variations on Mendel 1. Incomplete Dominance 2. Codominance 3. Multiple Alleles 4. Epistasis 5. Polygenic Inheritance
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Incomplete Dominance u When the F1 hybrids show a phenotype somewhere between the phenotypes of the two parents. Ex. Red X White snapdragons F1 = all pink F2 = 1 red: 2 pink: 1 white
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Result u No hidden Recessive. u 3 phenotypes and 3 genotypes (Hint! – often a “dose” effect) u Red = C R C R u Pink = C R C W u White = C W C W
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Another example
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Codominance u Both alleles are expressed equally in the phenotype. u Ex. MN blood group u MM u MN u NN
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Result u No hidden Recessive. u 3 phenotypes and 3 genotypes (but not a “dose” effect)
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Multiple Alleles u When there are more than 2 alleles for a trait. u Ex. ABO blood group u I A - A type antigen u I B - B type antigen u i - no antigen
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Result u Multiple genotypes and phenotypes. u Very common event in many traits.
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Alleles and Blood Types Type Genotypes A I A I A or I A i B I B I B or I B i AB I A I B O ii
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Comment u Rh blood factor is a separate factor from the ABO blood group. u Rh+ = dominant u Rh- = recessive u A+ blood = dihybrid trait
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Epistasis u When 1 gene locus alters the expression of a second locus. u Ex: u 1 st gene: C = color, c = albino u 2 nd gene: B = Brown, b = black
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Gerbils
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In Gerbils CcBb X CcBb Brown X Brown F1 = 9 brown (C_B_) 3 black (C_bb) 4 albino (cc__)
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Result u Ratios often altered from the expected. u One trait may act as a recessive because it is “hidden” by the second trait.
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Epistasis in Mice
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Problem u Wife is type A u Husband is type AB u Child is type O Question - Is this possible? Comment - Wife’s boss is type O
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Bombay Effect u Epistatic Gene on ABO group. u Alters the expected ABO outcome. u H = dominant, normal ABO u h = recessive, no A,B, reads as type O blood.
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Genotypes u Wife: type A (I A I A, Hh) u Husband: type AB (I A I B, Hh) u Child: type O (I A I A, hh) Therefore, the child is the offspring of the wife and her husband (and not the boss).
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Bombay - Detection u When ABO blood type inheritance patterns are altered from expected.
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Polygenic Inheritance u Factors that are expressed as continuous variation. u Lack clear boundaries between the phenotype classes. u Ex: skin color, height
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Genetic Basis u Several genes govern the inheritance of the trait. u Ex: Skin color is likely controlled by at least 4 genes. Each dominant gives a darker skin.
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Result u Mendelian ratios fail. u Traits tend to "run" in families. u Offspring often intermediate between the parental types. u Trait shows a “bell-curve” or continuous variation.
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Genetic Studies in Humans u Often done by Pedigree charts. u Why? u Can’t do controlled breeding studies in humans. u Small number of offspring. u Long life span.
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Pedigree Chart Symbols Male Female Person with trait
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Sample Pedigree
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Widows Peak u.u. Dominant Trait Recessive Trait
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Sickle-cell Disease u Most common inherited disease among African-Americans. u Single amino acid substitution results in malformed hemoglobin. u Reduced O 2 carrying capacity. u Codominant inheritance.
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Tay-Sachs u Eastern European Jews. u Brain cells unable to metabolize type of lipid, accumulation causes brain damage. u Death in infancy or early childhood.
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Cystic Fibrosis u Most common lethal genetic disease in the U.S. u Most frequent in Caucasian populations (1/20 a carrier). Produces defective chloride channels in membranes.
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Recessive Pattern u Usually rare. u Skips generations. u Occurrence increases with consaguineous matings. u Often an enzyme defect.
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Human Dominant Disorders u Less common then recessives. u Ex: u Huntington’s disease u Achondroplasia u Familial Hypercholsterolemia
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Inheritance Pattern u Each affected individual had one affected parent. u Doesn’t skip generations. u Homozygous cases show worse phenotype symptoms. u May have post-maturity onset of symptoms.
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Genetic Screening u Risk assessment for an individual inheriting a trait. u Uses probability to calculate the risk.
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General Formal R = F X M X D R = risk F = probability that the female carries the gene. M = probability that the male carries the gene. D = Disease risk under best conditions.
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Example u Wife has an albino parent. u Husband has no albinism in his pedigree. u Risk for an albino child?
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Risk Calculation u Wife = probability is 1.0 that she has the allele. u Husband = with no family record, probability is near 0. u Disease = this is a recessive trait, so risk is Aa X Aa =.25 u R = 1 X 0 X.25 u R = 0
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Risk Calculation u Assume husband is a carrier, then the risk is: R = 1 X 1 X.25 R =.25 There is a.25 chance that every child will be albino.
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Common Mistake u If risk is.25, then as long as we don’t have 4 kids, we won’t get any with the trait. u Risk is.25 for each child. It is not dependent on what happens to other children.
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Carrier Recognition u Fetal Testing u Amniocentesis u Chorionic villi sampling u Newborn Screening
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Fetal Testing u Biochemical Tests u Chromosome Analysis
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Amniocentesis u Administered between 11 - 14 weeks. u Extract amnionic fluid = cells and fluid. u Biochemical tests and karyotype. u Requires culture time for cells.
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Chorionic Villi Sampling u Administered between 8 - 10 weeks. u Extract tissue from chorion (placenta). u Slightly greater risk but no culture time required.
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Newborn Screening u Blood tests for recessive conditions that can have the phenotypes treated to avoid damage. Genotypes are NOT changed. u Ex. PKU
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Newborn Screening u Required by law in all states. u Tests 1- 6 conditions. u Required of “home” births too.
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Multifactorial Diseases u Where Genetic and Environment Factors interact to cause the Disease.
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Ex. Heart Disease u Genetic u Diet u Exercise u Bacterial Infection
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Summary u Know the Mendelian crosses and their patterns. u Be able to work simple genetic problems (practice). u Watch genetic vocabulary. u Be able to read pedigree charts.
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Summary u Be able to recognize and work with some of the “common” human trait examples.
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