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Mendelian Genetics and Meiosis
29

Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Mendelian Genetics and

Meiosis

Page 2: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Gregor Mendel (1822 – 1884)

Father __________Austrian monk who

worked with ___________in monastery garden.

Developed first theories on _________________.

http://history.nih.gov/exhibits/nirenberg/images/photos/01_mendel_pu.jpg

Page 3: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Why Experiment With Pea Plants?

Grow quicklyMany _______________________________ so they have

both _____ and ___________reproductive parts on the ______flower and can __________themselves. They are ___________meaning offspring will have same traits as parent.

Can ___________so one plant can pollinate another plant to produce offspring.

http://kentsimmons.uwinnipeg.ca/cm1504/Image215.gif

Page 4: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

____________________(features with different forms in a population) that are_________from ________ to _______.EX: Flower color or seed shape

Studied one _________ at a _____ to determine which traits appeared in offspring.

What was Mendel studying?

http://www.cfkeep.org/html/phpThumb.php?src=/uploads/peas_copy.gif&aoe=1&w=

Page 5: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

_________ crossed true breeding plants for each ____________.Example: crossed purple flower plant & white

flower plant.All offspring displayed the ___________ of one

parent. In this case, all had purple flowers. White flowers seemed to _________.

Mendel's First Experiment

http://www.biology.iupui.edu/biocourses/N100/images/10F1.gif

Page 6: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Conclusions:The trait that showed up

most often in the offspring was the __________ trait.

The trait that seemed to disappear or fade away was the _________trait.

To determine what happened to the _______ trait, _________decided to do another set of __________.

http://www.jbhs.k12.nf.ca/biology/photos/mvc-006f.jpg

http://www.windows.ucar.edu/earth/Life/images/earlobes.jpg

Page 7: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Allowed the plants produced by his first experiment to ____________.

All purple flowered plants self pollinated:____% of offspring were purple flowered_____% of offspring were white flowered

Mendel's Second Experiment

http://www.biology.iupui.edu/biocourses/N100/images/10f2.gif

Page 8: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

ConclusionsRecessive trait did not

________, it was _______ by the dominant trait as it showed up again in the _______generation.

Each plant had ______ of instructions (one from each parent) for each characteristic.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/17/Punnett_square_mendel_flowers.svg/550px-Punnett_square_mendel_flowers.svg.png

Page 9: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Mendel's Principles___________________is

predetermined by genes. _____are passed on from parents.

Some forms of genes are _______and others are ________.

Organisms have 2 copies of each gene (one from each parent).

______(different forms for a gene) for different genes segregate independently of one another. (____________cross) http://www1.umn.edu/ships/updates/

9mendels.gif

Page 10: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

AllelesDifferent forms of a ______

EX: freckles or no frecklesDominant allele – expressed

with an ____________letter.Recessive allele – expressed

with a ___________letter. NOTE: The ______ letter is

used to express an allele – variations are expressed with the upper or lower case.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/83/Punnett_square_(PSF).png

Page 11: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Phenotype vs. GenotypePHENOTYPE:

__________characteristic – the characteristic that you can see.

EX: Purple flowers

GENOTYPE: The two ________ alleles for a trait. (Cannot be seen)

EX: PP or Pp

http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/images/25_environmental_variation.gif

Page 12: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Types of Genotypes_________ Dominant:

Two dominant allelesPP or DD or BB

__________Recessive: Two recessive allelespp or dd or bb

__________: One dominant and one recessive allelePp or Dd or Bb

http://uwadmnweb.uwyo.edu/VetSci/Courses/PATB_4110/4-6/Class_Notes.htm

Page 13: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

__________ all possible _______ combinations for offspring from particular parents.

How to make a Punnett Square crossing a homozygous recessive white flowering pea plant with a heterozygous purple flowering pea plant.

Punnett Square

Page 14: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

___________ Dominance: One allele is not completely dominant over the other allele. Each allele contributes to the phenotype produced.EX: Snapdragons (white and red produce pink)

One gene may influence more than one trait.EX: in white tigers, one gene codes for fur color and eye

color.

Several genes may work together to produce a trait.EX: human skin, hair and eye color

Exceptions to Mendel's Principles

http://www.estrellamountain.edu/faculty/farabee/biobk/incomdom.gif

Page 15: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

MEIOSISCreates the ____________It is a copying process that produces cells with

____ the number of chromosomes.Helped Walter Sutton determine genes are

located on ____________ in the nucleus of the cell. Prior to this no one knew where the genetic traits (genes) were located.

http://www2.merriam-webster.com/mw/art/med/meiosis.gif

Page 16: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Meiosis IProphase IMetaphase IAnaphase ITelophase I and

CytokinesisMeiosis II

Prophase IIMetaphase IIAnaphase IITelophase II and

Cytokinesis

Steps of Meiosis

Page 17: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

http://www.cps.ci.cambridge.ma.us/CRLS/LC_R/classrooms/AUGUSTINE/Genetics/index_files/frame.html#slide0025.html

Page 18: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Prophase I__________chromoso

mes find each other and pair up (one chromosome from each parent

______________may occur

Centrioles move toward the poles

Nuclear membrane begins to dissolve

http://www.sciencecases.org/mitosis_meiosis/images/meiosis_a.gif

Page 19: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Metaphase I

Spindle fibers attach to homologous chromosomes.

Homologous chromosomes line up at the equator

http://www.sciencecases.org/mitosis_meiosis/images/meiosis_b.gif

Page 20: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Anaphase I

Homologous chromosomes are separated so each chromosome moves toward opposite poles.

http://www.sciencecases.org/mitosis_meiosis/images/meiosis_c.gif

Page 21: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Telophase IHomologous

chromosomes are completely separated with one chromosome at each pole.

Nuclear membrane re-forms

Cytokinesis takes place and cell divides to form two cells.

http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/lecturesf04am/telophase1m.jpg

Page 22: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Prophase IICentrioles move to

polesNuclear membrane

dissolves

NOTE: __________ ARE ______ COPIED AGAIN PRIOR TO PROPHASE II

http://www.sciencecases.org/mitosis_meiosis/images/meiosis_e.gif

Page 23: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Metaphase II

Spindle fibers form and attach to chromosomes

Chromosomes line up at the equator.

http://www.sciencecases.org/mitosis_meiosis/images/meiosis_f.gif

Page 24: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Anaphase II

Chromosomes are pulled apart so each chromatid moves toward opposite poles.

http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/lecturesf04am/anaphase2m.jpg

Page 25: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Chromatids reach the poles.Nuclear membrane re-formsCytokinesis occurs

Telophase II

http://www.sciencecases.org/mitosis_meiosis/images/meiosis_h.gif

Page 26: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

_____ new cellsEach cell has ½ the number of chromosomes

as parent cell (__________ – N)New cells are _____ ________ to each other or

to the parents as a result of crossing over.

MEIOSIS Results

Page 27: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

MeiosisSex cellsTwo divisions4 genetically

different cells produced

Cells produced have half the number of chromosomes (haploid) 2n n

Somatic cellsOne division2 genetically

identical cells produced

Cells produced have the same number of chromosomes as parents 2n 2n

Meosis vs Mitosis

Mitosis

Page 28: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Sex ChromosomesChromosomes that

carry the genes that determine sex.

In humans:Females: two X

chromosomes (XX)Males: one X

chromosome and one Y chromosome (XY)

Sex of offspring is determined by the ______:Egg fertilized by

sperm with X chromosome = FEMALE

Egg fertilized by sperm with Y chromosome = MALE

http://howyoudoin.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/male_female_symbol.jpg

Page 29: Father __________ Austrian monk who worked with ___________in monastery garden. Developed first theories on _________________. .

Sex-Linked Disorders

Males have an X and Y chromosome. The Y chromosome does not have all the genes found on the X chromosome, so they only have one copy of those genes on the X. If those genes are damaged, they do not have a backup while females do – they have two X chromosomes. Therefore, males are more likely to inherit these disorders.

Examples:Color blindnessHemophilia

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/MEDLINEPLUS/ency/images/ency/fullsize/9962.jpg

http://member.principalhealthnews.com/Imagebank/Articles_images/Hemophilia_02.gif