Genetics - TeacherWeb
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Transcript Genetics - TeacherWeb
Genetics
Ms Morin
May 2008
TRAITS
: Physical characteristics
of an organism inherited from
parents and passed on from one
generation to the next.
HEREDITY:
The passing of the
traits from parents to offspring.
GENETICS:
Study of heredity.
Common Traits
Eye color
Eye shape
Hair color
Height
Coat color
seed color
petal color
seed texture
blood type
Seed shape
There are also MANY biochemical traits that are
unseen (having certain enzymes, for example)
The genetic diversity of James Bond
http://www.athro.com/
evo/gen/geframe.htm
Chromosomes & Genes
Our body cells have
46 chromosomes
found in 23 pairs
Egg and sperm
cells have 23
chromosomes
each- no pairs.
There are a total of
between 20,000
and 30,000 genes
on our 23 pairs of
chromosomes.
Traits are controlled by
genes.
Genes are segments of
DNA on a chromosome
that code for a specific
trait
Each gene holds the
DNA “code” to make
one protein.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bo
oks/bv.fcgi?call=bv.View..Sho
wTOC&rid=gnd.TOC&depth=2
Different forms of the same gene are called
alleles.
Simple traits are controlled by 2 alleles of the
same gene: we inherit 2 alleles of each gene
for every simple trait.
1 allele is inherited from female sex cell (the
egg from the mom)
1 allele is inherited from male sex cells (the
sperm from the dad)
Different forms of a gene
Different forms of genes are called alleles.
Alleles can be dominant or recessive.
DOMINANT= trait is always expressed no
matter what the other allele is..
RECESSIVE = trait is only expressed if the
other allele for that gene is also recessive.
We use a capital letter to represent a
dominant allele and a lower case for
recessive alleles
Purebred or Hybrid?
PUREBRED: two identical alleles for a
trait
HYBRID= two different alleles for a trait
ExamplePurebred
Dominant
BB
Purebred
Recessive
bb
Hybrid
Bb
PHENOTYPE- visible traits or physical
appearance of an organism
Examples- blue eyes, short, black fur
GENOTYPE- genetic makeup of an
organism- its allele combination
Examples- bb, Tt, GG
Punnett Squares
What is it? A chart showing all the
possible combinations of alleles.
Geneticists use them to predict
outcomes.
(male)
(female)
1.
2.
3.
Trait- Hitchhikers Thumb
Hitchhiker’s Thumb is dominant (H).
No hitchhiker’s Thumb is recessive (h)
Cross- purebred Hitchhiker’s thumb
female X non-Hitchhiker’s thumb male
4. Offspring predictions
Genotype: ______%=4/4 = Hh
Phenotype: _____%= 4/4= Hitchhiker’s Thumb
Gregory Mendel
Father of genetics
Univ. of Vienna monk 1851
Wondered why different pea plants had
different characteristics
He observed that many pea plants’
traits were similar to their parents
Mendel’s Experiment
First generation F1
Second generation F2
purebred tall X purebred short
TT x tt
Phenotype=
Genotype=
Tt X Tt
Phenotype=
Genotype=
Mendel’s Conclusions
When you cross 2 purebred plants
– 1st generation only saw the dominant trait
(Tall; Purple flowers- next slide)
– 2nd generation showed purebred and
hybrid. (Tall & short; Purple &White)
1866- he presented his work but it
wasn’t looked at by the scientific world
until 1900!
Probability and Genetics
PROBABILITY: A number that describes
how likely it is that an event will occur
# times event occurs
# possible outcomes
= probability
*Results do not affect future results
HOMOZYGOUS- 2 identical alleles: tt, TT
same thing as purebred
HETEROZYGOUS- 2 different alleles:
Example: Tt
same thing as hybrid
Incomplete Dominance
alleles are not dominant nor recessive
the phenotype is a blend of the two alleles.
(Notice the use of all capital letters.)
Codominance* neither allele is dominant or recessive
* the two different traits appear together in
the organism
* example: ABO blood type