Genes and Inheritance
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Transcript Genes and Inheritance
Genes and Inheritance
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Research in Ecology
The elements
Meet the elements
Elements combine
to make Compounds
H2 O
C6H12O6
SiO2
Organic vs. Inorganic
Organic molecules have a “backbone” of carbon and hydrogen
methane
ethane
benzene
Organic molecules are manufactured by living things.
Organic vs. Inorganic
Inorganic molecules lack the “backbone” of carbon and hydrogen
water
carbon dioxide
ammonia
Inorganic molecules are the building blocks of organic molecules
Chemicals react
(combustion of methane)
Methane is the main
component of…
(politely known as flatulence)
Chemical Hierarchy
From smallest unit to largest:
atom
molecule
macromolecule (BIG molecule)
cell (the smallest LIVING unit)
tissue (cells working together for a common function)
organ (tissues working together for a common function)
organ system (organs working together for a common function)
organism (all the organ systems together!)
Polymers
Protein:
The pearls are amino acids
Polymers
Nucleic Acids:
The pearls are nucleotides
(A, C, G, or T)
Polymers
Carbohydrates:
The pearls are simple sugars
Polymers
Lipids (fats):
The pearls are fatty acids
Together…
Proteins, carbohydrates and lipids make up the
physical structure that is YOU (or any other
organism).
How do we do it?
Protein can be
STRUCTURAL
How do we do it?
Or protein can be
FUNCTIONAL
Helping the cell building things up or break them down.
DNA is the code
The Genetic Code
Let's watch a movie.
Genes control our traits
DNA is composed of a series of units of inheritance called
GENES
Each gene codes for one PROTEIN
Proteins either become part of the body (STRUCTURAL)
…or they build other molecules, forming the body (FUNCTIONAL)
DNA is wound on small protein “spools”
The result is a long, long strand of DNA and protein called a
CHROMOSOME
The Chromosome
Let's see the Magic of the Chromosome
Inheritance
All animals have
chromosomes
gene: a unit of inheritance
mutation: any change in a gene
locus: the physical location of a gene on the
chromosome
Not locust.
Locus.
All animals and plants
have chromosomes
having two complete sets of
chromosomes
(example: a body (somatic) cell)
diploid:
haploid: having only one complete set of
chromosomes
(example: sperm or egg)
Genotype to Phenotype
the physical
appearance/expression of a given trait
in an organism
phenotype:
the genetic coding of a
particular trait in an organism.
genotype:
Alleles:
Different Flavors of Genes
gene: a unit of inheritance. But mutations can give rise to…
alleles: alternate forms of a particular gene.
example: tongue rolling (or not)
dominant
recessive
We all have two alleles
per gene, but…
allele: one which masks the
expression of another at the same locus
dominant
allele: one whose expression is
masked by another at the same locus.
recessive
Everyone
One
has two alleles for each gene
from mom, one from dad.
All animals have
genes on chromosomes
homozygous: the two alleles of a gene at a
particular locus are the same in one individual.
heterozygous: the two alleles of a gene at a
particular locus are different in one individual.
example: Tongue roller (T) vs. non-roller (t)
TT – what will the phenotype be?
Tt – what will the phenotype be?
tt – what will the phenotype be?
And all animals started out
as a ZYGOTE
What we become
depends on…
NATURE
The nature and activity of our genes
NURTURE
The effect of developmental environment on our genes
This is true of
all living things.
Nature vs. Nurture?
How
much is due to NATURE?
How
much is due to NURTURE?
How
about doing an EXPERIMENT?