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Chapter 4 Modern Genetics Thursday, December 10, 2009 Pages 117 --138.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4 Modern Genetics Thursday, December 10, 2009 Pages 117 --138."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4 Modern Genetics Thursday, December 10, 2009 Pages 117 --138

2 Section 1 Human Inheritance

3 Objectives Explain what multiple alleles are. Explain why some human traits show a large variety of phenotypes. Explain how environmental factors can alter the effects of a gene. Identify what determines sex, and explain why some sex-linked traits are more common in males than in females. Describe how geneticists use pedigrees.

4 Traits Controlled by Single Genes Often one allele is dominant, while the other is recessive. These resulting traits have 2 distinctly different phenotypes, or physical appearance.

5 Multiple Alleles Human traits that are controlled by a single gene that has more than two alleles. 3 or more forms of a gene that code for a single trait. A person can only carry 2 since chromosomes exist in pairs. Blood type is determined by a single gene with 3 alleles.

6 Traits Controlled by Many Genes Some human traits show a large number of phenotypes because the traits are controlled by many genes. The genes act together as a group to produce a single trait. Examples include height and skin color.

7 Male or Female? The sex of a baby is determined by genes on chromosomes. Among the 23 pairs of chromosomes in each body cell is a single pair of chromosomes called the sex chromosomes. This determines whether a person is male or female. Male Female

8 Sex Chromosomes Sex chromosomes are the only pair of chromosomes that do not always match. Females have two X chromosomes. Males have one X and one Y chromosome. The Y chromosome is much smaller. It is the sperm that determines the sex of a child. Dad Mom

9 Sex-Linked Genes Genes on the X and Y chromosomes are called sex-linked genes. Alleles are passed from parent to child on a sex chromosome.

10 Sex-Linked Traits Sex-linked genes can have dominant and recessive alleles. Because males have only one X chromosome, males are more likely than females to have a sex-linked trait that is controlled by a recessive allele. Example: red-green colorblindness

11 Carrier A carrier is a person who has one recessive allele for a trait and one dominant allele. The carrier does not have the trait but can pass the recessive allele on to his or her offspring. With sex-linked traits, only females can be carriers.

12 Pedigrees A tool geneticists use to trace the inheritance of traits in humans. A chart or family tree that tracks which members of a family have a particular trait.

13 Homework Workbook 4.1 (due 12/14) Vocabulary quiz (12/15)


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