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Modern Genetics Part 5

Modern Genetics

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Modern Genetics. Part 5. History. Gregor Mendel : “Father of Genetics” Austrian Monk (1822-1884) Published the results of scientific research on Garden Peas ( Pisium sativum ) in 1865. Why study peas? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Modern Genetics

Modern GeneticsPart 5

Page 3: Modern Genetics

Trait: characteristic of an organism. Gene: piece of DNA that codes for a protein. Allele: different forms of a gene.

Genotype: The allele combination of an individual.

Phenotype: The visible characteristics that result from a genotype.

Useful Terms

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I. Human ChromosomesA. Types

1. Sex Chromosomes – 1 pair – carry the genes that determine male and female features (also some non-sex traits)

1. X and Y do not look alike but behave as a homologous pair at meiosis

2. XX = female, XY = male2. Autosomes – non-sex chromosomes (22

pairs) – genes are unrelated to sex determination

Chromosomes and Human Genetics

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PUNNETT SQUAREMethod for determining possible allele combination for the offspring

Gametes outside

Offspring Inside

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Determining Sex…X X

X

Y

MOM

DAD

X X X X

X Y X Y

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TallP Dwarfx

F1 All Tall

Phenotype

One Example of Mendel’s Work

Clearly Tall is Inherited…What happened to Dwarf?

F1 x F1 = F2

F23/4 Tall1/4 DwarfDwarf is not missing…just masked as “recessive” in a diploid state… there IS a female contribution.

1. Tall is dominant to Dwarf

2. Use D/d rather than T/t for symbolic logic

DD dd

Dd

GenotypeHomozygous

DominantHomozygous

Recessive

Heterozygous

Dwarfdd

TallDdd

TallDd

TallDDD

dDPunnett Square:

possible gametes

possible gametes

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In hamsters, white fur color (W) is dominant to brown fur color (w). If you cross a heterozygous female with white fur color (Ww) with a male that has brown fur (ww), what genotypes and phenotypes would you see and in what ratios?

Sample Problem

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Genetics After MendelRed

xYellow

All OrangeWhen these alleles go walking, they both do some talking (codominance)!

OK, so we cannot use R/r nor Y/y so we pick a third letter…P for the petal color gene.

Notice: we do NOT mix R/Y or r/y!

PRPR PYPY

PRPY

F1 x F1 = F2

F2YellowPYPY

Orange

PRPY

PY

Orange

PRPY

RedPRPRPR

PYPRPunnett Square:

possible gametes

possible gametes

P

F1

This F2 will NOT have a 3:1 ratio of phenotypes.

Instead it shows a 1:2:1 ratio!

The exception here proves the rule.

After 1900 several scientists tried to replicate Mendel’s crosses using other species including snapdragon.

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In horses, black and white coat colors are codominant. Heterozygous horses have gray coats.

Black horse genotype: HBHB

White horse genotype: HWHW

Gray horse genotype: HBHW

What would be the possible genotypes and phenotypes of the following crosses?

Black x WhiteGray x Gray

Sample Problem

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Blood Types

Blood Type:ABABO

Genotype IAIA , IAi IBIB , IBi IAIB ii

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1. If a male is homozygous for blood type B and a female is heterozygous for blood type A, what are the possible blood types in the offspring?

Try These

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2) Is it possible for a child with Type O blood to be born to a mother who is type AB? Why or why not?

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Chromosomes and Human Genetics

I. Human ChromosomesA. Types

1. Sex Chromosomes – 1 pair – carry the genes that determine male and female features (also some non-sex traits)

1. X and Y do not look alike but behave as a homologous pair at meiosis

2. XX = female, XY = male2. Autosomes – non-sex chromosomes (22

pairs) – genes are unrelated to sex determination

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B. Determining Sex…X X

X

Y

MOM

DAD

X X X X

X Y X Y

Page 19: Modern Genetics

II. Gene LocationA. Linked – Linkage Groups – genes located so close

together on a chromosome that the traits always seem to appear together

Ex. Red hair and frecklesEx. Colorblindness and Hemophilia

X X

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B. Sex-linked Traits – genes on the sex chromosomes

- Expression of certain genes often appears more in one sex than the other

- Males require only one copy of a gene since they only have one X chromosome

- See Royal Families of Europe Pedigree- Ex. Eye color in fruit flies, hemophilia, color-blindness

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Colorblindness Tests

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X-Linked/Sex Linkage – do not write

Genes present on the X chromosome exhibit unique patterns of inheritance due to the presence of only one X chromosome in males.

X-linked disorders show up rarely in females X linked disorders show up in males whose

mothers were carriers (heterozygotes)

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Practice Sex-linked Problems…. What will the result of mating between a normal

(non-carrier) female and a hemophiliac male?

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A female carrier who is heterozygous for the recessive, sex-linked trait causing red-green colorblindness, marries a normal male. What proportions of their MALE progeny will have red-green colorblindness?

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Hemophilia is inherited as an X-linked recessive. A woman has a brother with this defect and a mother and father who are phenotypically normal. What is the probability that this woman will be a carrier if she herself is phenotypically normal?

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C. Gene Interactions

1. Polygenetic trait – many genes influence a single trait (ex. Height, intelligence)

2. Pleiotropic effect – one gene having many effects (ex. Gene to make testosterone)

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Pleiotropy Expression of a single gene has

multiple phenotypic effects Marfan Syndrome – abnormal

gene that makes fibrillin (important in connective tissues)

?

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III. Genetic Analysis

A. Karyotype – visualized chromosomes stained, squashed, and photographed at metaphase

- They are characteristic of the species or individual

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B. Pedigree – chart showing family relationships (see

worksheet)

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Pedigree Analysis Method of tracking a

trait through generations within a family.

Good method of tracking sex-linked traits as well as autosomal traits.

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Sex-Linked Pedigree Shows gender bias

with males exhibiting the trait more often than females

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Autosomal Dominant Pedigree

Autosomal dominant traits do not skip a generation

Autosomal dominant traits do not show gender bias

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Autosomal Recessive Pedigree

Autosomal recessive traits skip a generation

Autosomal recessive traits do not show gender bias

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Incomplete Dominance

Neither allele is dominant Heterozygotes are a blend of

homozygous phenotypes = no distinct expression of either allele

Page 39: Modern Genetics

Try these In a plant species, if the B1 allele (blue flowers)

and the B2 allele (white flowers) are incompletely dominant (B1 B2 is light blue), what offspring ratio is expected in a cross between a blue-flowered plant and a white-flowered plant?

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•What would be the phenotypic ratio of the flowers produced by a cross between two light blue flowers?

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2. Codominance

No dominance and both alleles are completely expressed

Ex. Cat color C1C1 – Tan C1C2 – Tabby (black and tan spotted) C2C2 - Black

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Try These1. Cattle can be red (RR = all red hairs), white

(WW = all white hairs), or roan (RW = red & white hairs together.

a. Predict the phenotypic ratios of offspring when a homozygous white cow is crossed with a roan bull.

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b. What should the genotypes & phenotypes for parent cattle be if a farmer wanted only cattle with red fur?

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1. A cross between a black cat & a tan cat produces a tabby pattern (black & tan fur together).

a. What pattern of inheritance does this illustrate?

b. What percent of kittens would have tan fur if a tabby cat is crossed with a black cat?

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3. Multiple Alleles More than 2 alleles for one trait Ex. Eye color, hair color, blood type, guinea pig fur

color ABO blood groups

Each individual is A, B, AB, or O phenotype Phenotype controlled by marker on RBC IA and IB alleles are dominant to the i allele IA and IB alleles are codominant to each other

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Blood TypesBlood Type:ABABO

Genotype IAIA , IAi IBIB , IBi IAIB ii

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Try These1. If a male is homozygous for blood type B and a female

is heterozygous for blood type A, what are the possible blood types in the offspring?

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2) Is it possible for a child with Type O blood to be born to a mother who is type AB? Why or why not?

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3. A child is type AB. His biological mother is also type AB. What are the possible phenotypes of his biological father?

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Human hair color follows a similar pattern:Alleles: HBn = brown HBd = blonde hR = red hbk = black

HBnHBn = dark brownHBnHBd = sandy brownHBnhR = auburnHBnhbk = dark brown

HBdHBd = blondeHBdhR = strawberry blondeHBdhbk = blonde

hRhR = redhRhbk = red

hbkhbk = blackDominant does NOT mean frequent! Recessive can

be common!