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Mendel and Meiosis Chapter 10 p. 258 - 285
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Chapter Outline Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Meiosis
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Mendel’s Laws of Heredity Section 1 p. 258 - 268 http://www.accessexcellence.org/AB/BC/Gregor_Mendel.html
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Genetics Genetics is the branch of biology that studies heredity. Heredity is the passing of traits from from parents to offspring. one generation to the next Traits are characteristics that are inherited. Gregor Mendel is the father of genetics. He studied pea plants.
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Why peas? Mendel chose peas because they reproduce sexually, and both the male and female gametes are in the same flower. Therefore, plants could be self-pollinated or cross-pollinated. Gametes – sex cells (sperm & egg = pollen & ovule). Gametes have only 1 copy of each chromosome, But body cells have 2 copies of every chromosome (1 from mom, 1 from dad).
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Pea Reproduction Pollination – The transfer of the male pollen grains to the female ovule. Fertilization – The fusing together of male and female gametes. Self pollination – male and female gametes come from the same plant. Cross pollination – male and female gametes come from different plants.
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Mendel’s Monohybrid Cross Monohybrid cross – Reproductive cross in which the parents differ by only one trait Mendel cross-pollinated a true breeding tall and true breeding short pea plant to produce a new hybrid plant. True breeding – when crossed with itself, produces only offspring like itself. Hybrid – offspring of parents that have different forms of a certain trait. All the F1 offspring of the monohybrid cross were tall. F1 generation = 1 st offspring P1 generation = parents Then he self-pollinated the F1 generation ¾ of the F2 offspring were tall, and ¼ were short.
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Rule of Unit Factors Mendel’s conclusion from his monohybrid cross: Rule of unit factors: each organism has two factors for each trait. He knew this because the short factor showed up in the F2 generation. We now know that these factors are genes that are located on chromosomes. One gene (or factor) comes from the female parent and one comes from the male parent. Different forms of genes (factors) for the same trait are called alleles. Each allele exists on a chromosome from mom and dad. TT, tt, Tt
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Phenotype and Genotype Phenotype – the way a trait is expressed, its looks or behavior Genotype – allele / genetic makeup of trait Dominant Allele – upper case, written first Recessive Allele – lower case, written last Homozygous – both alleles are the same TT (homozygous dominant) tt (homozygous recessive) Heterozygous – alleles are different Tt
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Rule of Dominance Dominant traits The dominant allele is the one that is always seen in the phenotype. Tall plant allele is dominant over short plant allele. Organisms can look the same but have different alleles (genes) due to dominance. TT, Tt Recessive traits The recessive allele is only seen in the phenotype when no dominant allele is present. tt
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Law of Segregation Every individual plant has two alleles of each gene. (Tt) Gametes (sex cells) receive only one of these alleles, so two types of gametes can be produced. (Gamete 1 = T, Gamete 2 = t) Then, fertilization combines one allele from each parent randomly. In other words, the alleles of the same trait separate (or segregate) from one another and enter the gametes. during fertilization, the gametes randomly pair to form 4 combinations of alleles
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Mendel’s Dihybrid Crosses Mendel also did crosses involving TWO different traits, these are called dihybrid crosses. Pea Shape – Round or wrinkled RR, Rr, rr And Pea Color – Yellow or green YY, Yy, yy
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Dihybrid Cross Parent Generation (P1) All true breeding pea plants RRYY x rryy Second Generation (F1) All Round and Yellow Third Generation (F2) 9 Round Yellow, 3 Round Green, 3 Wrinkled Yellow, 1 Wrinkled Green 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio This ratio always occurs in the F2 generation!
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Law of Independent Assortment Explains the 9:3:3:1 ratio in the F2 generation observed from Mendel’s dihybrid crosses. Genes for different traits are inherited independently of each other. They don’t stick together. RrYy produces gametes of any of the following type, Ry RY rY ry
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Punnett Squares Shorthand method of finding possible genotypes developed in 1905 by Reginald Punnett. Used as an easy way to predict the phenotypic ratios of possible offspring.
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Classwork – Due Today! Section Assessment (1-5), pg. 262 Do these monohybrid cross Punnett squares: 1.) Homozygous tall x homozygous short 2.) Homozygous tall x heterozygous tall 3.) Heterozygous tall x homozygous short Tell whether each of these represents genotype or phenotype. If it represents genotype, tell whether it is heterozygous, homozygous dominant, or homozygous recessive. a.) LL b.) blond hair c.) dimpled chin d.) blue eyes e.) Dd f.) ss
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Meiosis Section 2
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Chromosome Numbers Diploid A cell with two of each kind of chromosome One set of chromosomes from each parent 2 sets of instructions (Tt) 2n Haploid Gamete cells contain ONE of each kind of chromosome 1 set of instructions (T) or (t) 1n
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Homologous Chromosomes Two chromosomes of each pair (one from each parent) Genes arranged in same order on each chromosome Genes come in different versions called alleles!
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Meiosis produces haploid gametes Mitosis = reproduction of body cells Meiosis = production of sex cells (gametes) A cell undergoes a normal cell cycle before a meiotic division - DNA is duplicated Meiosis involves two separate divisions, producing four haploid cells Each gamete produced is genetically unique
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Crossing Over Occurs during Prophase I Two Chromatids, one from each pair, wrap around each other Chromatids often break as they twist and the broken ends may switch places
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Meiosis provides variation 7 pairs of chromosomes (Pea plant) 128 Possible sperm, 128 possible eggs 16,384 possible offspring 23 pairs of chromosomes (Human) 8 million possible sperm, 8 million eggs 70 trillion different zygotes possible
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Nondisjunction Failure of homologous chromosomes to separate properly Trisomy – extra chromosome Monosomy – missing chromosome Sometimes entire sets don’t separate Triploid,Tetraploid, Hexaploid Called polyploids Frequently occurs in plants
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Gene Linkage and Maps Sometimes genes seem to be inherited together These genes lie very close on a chromosome to each other – Linked genes Crossing over can separate these linked genes – frequency of new gene combinations help map genes
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