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Genetics 101 What is genetics?

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Presentation on theme: "Genetics 101 What is genetics?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Genetics 101 What is genetics?
The study of how traits are inherited and passed from parents to children

2 Objectives By the end of this lesson, you will be able to answer the following questions. How do twins happen? How is the sex of a baby determined? What determines the traits or characteristics of a child? What are recessive and dominant genes? How do I read a Punnett Square and predict heritability?

3 Genetics is what has created…
This… this and this

4 Gregor Mendel Between 1856 and 1863 Mendel patiently cultivated and tested at least 28,000 pea plants, carefully analyzing seven pairs of seeds for comparison, such as shape of seed, color of seed, tall stemmed and short stemmed and tall plants and short plants.

5 Mendel is seen as the father of genetics
Mendel is seen as the father of genetics. It wasn’t until the early 1900’s that Mendel’s work was taken seriously. In 1944, Oswald Avery, Colin Macleod, and Maclyn McCarty theorized that a substance called deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA for short, was the actual genetic material found in chromosomes. Since then, we have made great leaps and bounds in genetics which has allowed us to clone animals, do DNA testing, and further increase our food supply.

6 What’s the difference?? Twins There are two types of twins:
They are Identical and Fraternal What’s the difference??

7 Identical Twins If one egg is fertilized and splits
into two embryos, the resulting children are called Identical twins. They are exactly alike genetically. They will always be the same sex.

8 Fraternal Twins When two eggs are fertilized and develop into twins they are called Fraternal They are only as closely related as any brothers and sisters. They can be the same sex or different sexes.

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10 Conjoined Twins Sometimes the egg does not completely split and conjoined twins result.

11 A Child’s Sex: Every person has chromosomes, which carry the genes, that determine who we are. Our parents give these genes to us. Two (one pair) of these chromosomes are sex genes. Each egg carries a female chromosome. Each sperm carries either a male or female chromosome The female is labeled the _____ chromosome . The male is labeled the ____ chromosome. X Y

12 Millions of sperm swim towards the same egg, but only one can fertilize it.
The eggs carry only the X chromosome. The sperm carry either the X or the Y chromosome. x Y X X

13 Females are XX (both parents contributed a female chromosome)
Males are XY (the mother contributed an X and the father contributed a Y) It depends on which sperm from the father fertilizes the egg. The father determines the sex of the child.

14 Our traits and the traits of our children
In the same way, our traits are carried through our parents’ genes to us. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes (including the sex determining ones). For each pair, one gene is contributed from the father and one from the mother. Our traits are determined by which genes our parents gave us.

15 Eye Color We use letters to represent the genetic make-up of an organism. Capital letters are used for _______________________. Lower case letters are used for ______________________ What color is dominant? What color is recessive? B= Brown gene b= blue gene When a dominant and a recessive gene occur together, the dominant gene takes over and “shows”. A dominant gene over rides the effects of the recessive genes. Dominant Recessive

16 If a blue eyed man has children with a brown eyed woman and the genes look like Bb, the person will be carrying the blue eyed gene, but will have brown eyes. Brown eyes can be either BB, or Bb. When the genes are different (Bb), they are called _______________ Blue eyes will always be bb. Why? ________________________________________ Hybrid Only the recessive gene is present. If the dominant brown was present, the eyes would LOOK brown.

17 How can we predict heredity?
A man with brown eyes (BB) has children with a blue eyed (bb) woman. B B b ______ chance brown eyes _____ chance blue eyes

18 __________ is how the person looks. (e.g. brown eyes).
___________ is the genetic makeup of the person’s trait (e.g. hybrid brown) __________ is how the person looks. (e.g. brown eyes). If your eyes are brown, your Genotype is either BB or Bb. If your eyes are brown, your Phenotype brown. Genotype Phenotype

19 What if a blue eyed man has children with a hybrid brown eyed woman?
______ chance blue eyed children _____ chance brown eyed children

20 What about two blue eyed parents?
_______ Chance of blue eyes _______ Chance of brown eyes

21 Cross two brown eyed hybrid parents:
_______ Chance of blue eyes _______ Chance of brown eyes

22 Cross two dominant brown eyed parents:
_______ Chance of blue eyes _______ Chance of brown eyes

23 Cross a Hybrid brown x blue eyed person:
_______ Chance of blue eyes _______ Chance of brown eyes

24 How has the study of genetics affected our lives?
Improved our Food Supply: Scientists have helped to select for crops that provide more food and are resistant to insects, for cows that give more milk, for beef and chickens that grows faster, etc. DNA Testing: Determining paternity, and eliminating people accused of crimes. Medical Advances Scientists have created drugs ( eg. insulin), vaccines, and linked some genes to disease which have all had large impacts on our health. Cloning: Scientists have cloned many animals. What’s next?

25 What’s next? Human cloning? Curing diseases?
Selecting the traits of our children? ??????????? The potential is endless! >>>.>>>>

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