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5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193
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5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

5.1 Mendelian Inheritance

Pages 184-193

Page 2: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Trait

A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited.Example: eye colour

Page 3: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Gregor Mendel

The father of genetics (1822-1884)

Page 4: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Pea plants

Page 5: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Experiments

Flower colourFlower positionStem lengthSeed shapeSeed colourPod shapePod colour

Page 6: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

True-breeding plants

Plants that produce offspring that have the same trait as the parent.

Page 7: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

hybrid

• Offspring of two different true-breeding plants.

Page 8: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Monohybrid crosses

breeding two organisms with different versions of only one traitP generation (parental) …true breedingF1 generation (filial generation)…hybrid offspring

Page 9: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Purple flower crossed with white flower

Page 10: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

F2 generation

Crossing the F1 generation: F2 generation with some purple and some white, but no pink flowers.3:1 ratio of purple to white flowers

Page 11: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Mendel’s conclusions

1. For each trait, an organism carries two genes, one from each parent.

2. Parents donate only one copy of the gene to their offspring. (sperm and eggs are haploid)

Page 12: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Allele

A specific version of a trait or form of a gene.

Page 13: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Genotype vs. Phenotype

Genotype: the organism’s genes (genetic make-up) including genes that are hidden from view

Phenotype: the traits that are expressed, the physical appearance of the organism.

Page 14: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Dominant vs. Recessive Alleles

A Dominant Allele is expressed if it is present in the gene. Ex. PP, Pp, pP

A Recessive Allele is expressed only if there is no dominant gene Ex. pp

Page 15: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Purple vs. White flowers

• Let P be the purple flower gene• Let p be the white flower gene• Homozygous…both alleles are the

same, PP or pp• Heterozygous…both alleles are

different, Pp

Page 16: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

What you see …isn’t always what you get!

Genotype PhenotypePP homozygous dominant

purple

Pp heterozygous Purple (carrier of white gene)

pp homozygous recessive

white

Page 17: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Punnett Square

Page 18: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Punnett Square

A grid system for predicting the probability of inheriting certain genes

Page 19: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Probability

The measure of the chance that an event will happen.Example: Toss a coin, call it.The chance of tails is 50%

Page 20: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Test Crosses

To determine if the parent is PP or Pp, cross it with a homozygous recessive individual.

If 100% of the offspring show the dominant trait the parent was PP.

If the offspring displays both phenotypes, the parent was Pp.

Page 21: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Is the parent PP or Pp?

Page 22: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Eye colour

B…brownb…blue

Page 23: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.

Green pods vs. yellow pods

Y…yellow (dominant)y…green (recessive)Cross between yellow heterozygous and green homozygous recessive

Page 24: 5.1 Mendelian Inheritance Pages 184-193. Trait A particular version of a characteristic that can be inherited. Example: eye colour.