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23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure
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23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

23 August, 2006

Chapters 1-2

Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure

Page 2: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Overview• Mendel refuted the blending hypothesis, proposing

particulate units of inheritance - genes.• The idea of genetic inheritance gained support from the

behavior of chromosomes in meiosis and fertilization.• Linkage analysis can give information about the relative

location of genes on chromosomes.• The success of Mendelian genetics increased the importance

of characterizing the genetic material.• Chromosomes are composed of DNA and protein - the DNA

is the genetic material.• Nucleic acid structure gives important insight into genetic

function.

Page 3: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Review of Mendelian Inheritance

• Genes influence characters, and may occur in a number of different allelic forms.•Each organism / cell has two copies of each gene, and may be homozygous or heterozygous.•Gametes carry a single allele of each gene. Alleles are distributed randomly to gametes.•Fertilization combines the alleles present in the two participating gametes.

Page 4: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Incomplete Dominance Independent Assortment

Page 5: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Linkage and Recombination• Linked genes are carried on the same chromosome.

• Homologous chromosomes exchange genetic material during synapsis. This changes the combinations of alleles that are possible

• Recombination frequency is proportional to physical distance.

Page 6: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Genetic maps use crossover frequency to order groups of linked genes.

Page 7: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

•Genes are carried on chromosomes, and are inherited unchanged and undiluted.

•Mutations are rare events that change one allele to another.

•A genetic material that was inherited unchanged and undiluted, but subject to rare mutation answered a major flaw in evolutionary theory.

•The success of genetics intensified interest in the nature of the genetic material.

•Chromosomes are composed of DNA and Protein. Most biologists thought that Protein was the genetic material, while DNA was structural.

Page 8: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

DNA is the Genetic Material

•DNA but not protein can transform bacteria.

Page 9: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

Viral Genes are nucleic acids

Page 10: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.

The structure of DNA elucidated its function.

Page 11: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.
Page 12: 23 August, 2006 Chapters 1-2 Mendelian Genetics and Nucleic Acid Structure.