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Mendelian ExceptionsMendelian Exceptions  Mendel got lucky – all 7 traits he studied showed complete (simple) dominance.

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Presentation on theme: "Mendelian ExceptionsMendelian Exceptions  Mendel got lucky – all 7 traits he studied showed complete (simple) dominance."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Mendelian ExceptionsMendelian Exceptions  Mendel got lucky – all 7 traits he studied showed complete (simple) dominance.

3 Mendelian ExceptionsMendelian Exceptions  Mendel got lucky – all 7 traits he studied showed complete (simple) dominance.  One allele is completely dominant over the other allele  Homozygous dominant and heterozygous = same phenotype  1 allele is enough for full expression of dominant trait

4 Incomplete Dominance = the norm  Heterozygote = intermediate phenotype  1 allele is not enough for full expression

5 Incomplete DominanceIncomplete Dominance  Ex: flower color  R = red RR x rr  r = white

6 Incomplete DominanceIncomplete Dominance  F 2 : Rr x Rr

7 Incomplete DominanceIncomplete Dominance  F 2 : Rr x Rr  Alleles not blended – still able to separate. RR Rr rr 1 red 2 pink 1 white

8 Codominance – Both alleles are expressed equally

9  Ex: Cows  B = black  W = white  BB = Black  WW = White  BW = ???

10 Codominance – Both alleles are expressed equally  Ex: Cows  B = black  W = white  BB = Black  WW = White  BW = Black and white  Other examples: calico cats, streaked flowers…

11 Multiple allelesMultiple alleles  Allele: Alternate forms of a gene  Only 2 possible alleles in an individual, BUT any # of alleles may be present in a population due to mutations

12 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles

13 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive

14 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AA

15 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA

16 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AO

17 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA

18 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BB

19 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB

20 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB BO

21 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB BOB

22 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB BOB AB

23 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB BOB ABAB (codom.)

24 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB BOB ABAB (codom.) OO

25 Blood Types (ABO blood types)  Example of simple dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles  Alelles = A, B, O  A & B = Dominant  O = Recessive Genotype Phenotype AAA AOA BBB BOB ABAB (codom.) OOO

26  Q: What combination of parents have an equal chance of having any of the 4 blood types?

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28 Mexican Hairless DogsMexican Hairless Dogs  Hairless (H) is completely dominant over hairy (h).  When two hairless are crossed:  2/3 hairless  1/3 hairy Why???

29 Mexican Hairless DogsMexican Hairless Dogs  Hairless (H) is completely dominant over hairy (h).  When two hairless are crossed:  2/3 hairless  1/3 hairy

30 Mexican Hairless DogsMexican Hairless Dogs  Hairless (H) is completely dominant over hairy (h).  When two hairless are crossed:  2/3 hairless  1/3 hairy HHHh hh

31 Mexican Hairless DogsMexican Hairless Dogs  Hairless (H) is completely dominant over hairy (h).  When two hairless are crossed:  2/3 hairless  1/3 hairy HHHh hh

32 Lethal AlleleLethal Allele  2 copies of a lethal allele = death (usually stillborn)  Hint: if offspring ratio is x/3, think lethal allele (someone is dying)

33 Lethal AlleleLethal Allele  Q: How can we breed hairless dogs without stillborns?

34 3, 4, 5, etc. trait crosses3, 4, 5, etc. trait crosses  If a pea plant that is TTRrPp is crossed with a plant that is TtrrPp, what percent of the offspring will be heterozygous for all three traits?

35 Is there an easier way???

36 Product RuleProduct Rule  Make a simple 4 square cross for each trait, then multiply the results for each PPPp pp Rr rr TT Tt

37 Epistasis  The process of one gene controlling the expression of another  An epistatic gene can completely mask the effects of another gene  2 genes -> 1 trait

38 Example: Lab Fur ColorExample: Lab Fur Color  2 genes are responsible for fur color:  Black gene  Brown-blonde gene

39 Example: Hair ColorExample: Hair Color  2 genes are responsible for hair color:  Black gene  Brown-blonde gene  Black is epistatic (dominant) over the red-blonde gene

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42 Polygenic InheritancePolygenic Inheritance  Most traits (especially visible ones) are due to the interaction of multiple proteins, thus multiple genes  As such, most traits do not follow simple Mendelian ratios

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