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Unit 3 Part 1 - Chapter 14 (Mendelian Genetics) - DAY 1


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AMRIT KAUR


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[Front]


How are traits passed down?
[Back]


Based on the alleles present in sperm/egg cells
Based on the alleles present in sperm/egg cells

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Unit 3 Part 1 - Chapter 14 (Mendelian Genetics) - DAY 1 - Details

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What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
How are traits passed down?
Based on the alleles present in sperm/egg cells
How did Mendel discover the principles of heredity?
- Mendel discovered the basic principles of heredity by breeding garden peas in carefully planned experiments - His approach allowed him to deduce principles that had remained elusive to others - Mendel in many different types of peas
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
Character
A heritable feature that varies among individuals (such as flower color) is called a character​
Trait
Each variant for a character, such as purple or white color for flowers, is called a trait​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
Advantages of using peas in Mendel's experiments
- Short generation time - Large numbers of offspring - Mating could be controlled; plants could be allowed to self-pollinate or could be cross-pollinated
How did Mendel track characters?
He tracked characters that had two distinct forms (like short or tall, purple or white, etc.)
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
True-breeding
- Plants that produce offspring of the same variety when they self-pollinate - Mendel started with these varieties
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
Hybridization
In a typical experiment, Mendel mated two contrasting, true-breeding varieties, a process called hybridization​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
P generation, F1 generation, F2 generation
- P generation: the true-breeding parents - F1 generation: the hybrid offspring of the P generation - F2 generation: When F1 individuals self-pollinate or cross-pollinate with other F1 hybrids, the F2 generation is produced​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
What was the hypothesis for heredity before Mendel? How was it disproven?
- In the 1800s, the explanation of heredity was the “blending” hypothesis (when they believed that physical traits were a mix of the parents traits) - BUT when Mendel crossed contrasting, true-breeding white- and purple-flowered pea plants, all of the F1 hybrids were purple​ (not a mix of white and purple!) - This result was not predicted by the blending hypothesis - When Mendel crossed the F1 hybrids, many of the F2 plants had purple flowers, but some had white - Mendel discovered a ratio of about three purple flowers to one white flower in the F2 generation
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
How did Mendel discover dominant and recessive traits?
- Mendel reasoned that only the purple flower factor was affecting flower color in the F1 hybrids​ - Mendel called the purple flower color a dominant trait and the white flower color a recessive trait​ - The factor for white flowers was not diluted or destroyed because it reappeared in the F2 generation​ (RECESSIVE) - Mendel observed the same pattern of inheritance in six other pea plant characters (like the character short vs. tall) [IDK IF U NEED TO KNOW EVERY SINGLE ONE]
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​
Mendel's Model
- Mendel developed a model to explain the 3:1 inheritance pattern he observed in F2 offspring​ - This model contains four concepts (which can be related to what we now know about genes and chromosomes)
First concept in Mendel's Model
- alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characters​ - For example, the gene for flower color in pea plants exists in two versions, one for purple flowers and the other for white flowers - These alternative versions of a gene are called alleles - Each gene resides at a specific locus on a specific chromosome
Alleles
Alternative versions of a gen
Locus
- Like location - Each gene resides at a specific locus on a specific chromosome
Second Concept in Mendel's Model
- for each character, an organism inherits two alleles, one from each parent​ - Mendel made this deduction without knowing about chromosomes (TBH NOT RLLY IMPORTANT BUT I ADDED ANYWAY ~~] - The two alleles at a particular locus may be identical, as in the true-breeding plants of Mendel’s P generation - Or the two alleles at a locus may differ, as in the F1 hybrids
Third Concept in Mendel's Model
- if the two alleles at a locus differ, then one, the dominant allele, determines the organism’s appearance​ - The other, the recessive allele, has no noticeable effect on appearance - In the flower-color example, the F1 plants had purple flowers because the allele for that trait is dominant
Fourth Concept in Mendel's Model - Law of Segregation
- the law of segregation: the two alleles for a heritable character separate (segregate) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes​ - Thus, an egg or a sperm gets only one of the two alleles that are present in the organism - This segregation of alleles corresponds to the distribution of homologous chromosomes to different gametes in meiosis
Punnett square
- Possible combinations of sperm and egg can be shown using a Punnett square - A capital letter represents a dominant allele, and a lowercase letter represents a recessive allele
Homozygote
An organism with two identical alleles for a gene is called a homozygote
Homozygous
When homozygote, it is said to be homozygous for the gene controlling that character
Heterozygote, heterozygous
- An organism with two different alleles for a gene is a heterozygote and is said to be heterozygous for the gene controlling that character - Unlike homozygotes, heterozygotes are not true-breeding
Why do we distinguish between an organism's phenotype and genotype?
- An organism’s traits do not always reveal its genetic composition - Therefore, we distinguish between an organism’s phenotype (physical appearance) and its genotype (genetic makeup) - In the example of flower color in pea plants, PP and Pp plants have the same phenotype (purple) but different genotypes
Testcross
- An individual with the dominant phenotype could be either homozygous dominant or heterozygous​ - To determine the genotype we can carry out a testcross: breeding the mystery individual with a homozygous recessive individual​ - If any offspring display the recessive phenotype, the mystery parent must be heterozygous​
Monohybrids, monohybrid cross
- Mendel derived the law of segregation by following a single character - The F1 offspring produced in this cross were monohybrids, meaning that they were heterozygous for one character - A cross between such heterozygotes is called a monohybrid cross
Dihybrids, dihybrid cross
- Mendel identified his second law of inheritance by following two characters at the same time - Crossing two true-breeding parents differing in two characters produces dihybrids in the F1 generation, heterozygous for both characters - A dihybrid cross, a cross between F1 dihybrids, can determine whether two characters are transmitted to offspring together as a unit or independently [SEE IMAGE]
Law of independent assortment
- Using a dihybrid cross, Mendel developed the law of independent assortment​ - It states that each pair of alleles segregates independently of any other pair of alleles during gamete formation - This law applies only to genes on different, nonhomologous chromosomes or those far apart on the same chromosome - Genes located near each other on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together​
Rules of probability
- Probability laws govern Mendelian inheritance - Mendel’s laws of segregation and independent assortment reflect the rules of probability that apply to tossing coins or rolling dice​ - When tossing a coin, the outcome of one toss has no impact on the outcome of the next toss​ - In the same way, the alleles of one gene segregate into gametes independently of another gene’s alleles​
Multiplication rule
- The multiplication rule states that the probability that two or more independent events will occur together, at the same time, is the product of their individual probabilities​ - Probability in an F1 monohybrid cross can be determined using the multiplication rule - Segregation in a heterozygous plant is like flipping a coin: Each gamete has a ½ chance of carrying the dominant allele and a ½ chance of carrying the recessive allele​​
Addition rule
- The addition rule states that the probability that any one of two or more mutually exclusive events will occur is calculated by adding together their individual probabilities - Mutually exclusive events do not have to occur at the same time - The rule of addition can be used to figure out the probability that an F2 plant from a monohybrid cross will be heterozygous rather than homozygous
How to apply the rules of probability to predict the outcome of crosses involving multiple characters​
- A multicharacter cross (dihybrid or greater) is equivalent to two or more independent monohybrid crosses occurring simultaneously​ - In calculating the chances for various genotypes, each character is considered separately, and then the individual probabilities are multiplied​
Do Mendel's Relationships Still Apply?
- The relationship between genotype and phenotype is rarely as simple as in the pea plant characters Mendel studied​ - Many heritable characters are not determined by only one gene with two alleles​ - However, the basic principles of segregation and independent assortment apply even to more complex patterns of inheritance​
When may the inheritance of characters by a single gene deviate from simple Mendelian patterns?
Inheritance of characters by a single gene may deviate from simple Mendelian patterns in the following situations:​ - When alleles are not completely dominant or recessive​ - When a gene has more than two alleles - When a gene produces multiple phenotypes​​
Complete dominance
Complete dominance occurs when phenotypes of the heterozygote and dominant homozygote are identical​
Incomplete dominance
In incomplete dominance, the phenotype of F1 hybrids is somewhere between the phenotypes of the two parental varieties​
Codominance
In codominance, two dominant alleles affect the phenotype in separate, distinguishable ways​
Frequency of Dominant Alleles​
- Dominant alleles are not necessarily more common in populations than recessive alleles​ - For example: One baby out of 400 in the United States is born with extra fingers or toes​. This condition, polydactyly, is caused by a dominant allele, found much less frequently in the population than the recessive allele​.
How many allelic forms do genes exist in? Blood types?
- Most genes exist in populations in more than two allelic forms​ - For example, the four phenotypes of the ABO blood group in humans are determined by three alleles for the enzyme that attaches A or B carbohydrates to red blood cells: IA, IB, and i​ - The enzyme encoded by the IA allele adds the A carbohydrate, whereas the enzyme encoded by the IB allele adds the B carbohydrate; the enzyme encoded by the i allele adds neither​
Pleiotropy​
- Most genes have multiple phenotypic effects, a property called pleiotropy ​ - For example, pleiotropic alleles are responsible for the multiple symptoms of certain hereditary diseases, such as cystic fibrosis and sickle-cell disease​
Epistasis
- Some traits may be determined by two or more genes​- In epistasis, one gene affects the phenotype of another due to interaction of their gene products​ - [ IN FANCY WORDS: In epistasis, expression of a gene at one locus alters the phenotypic expression of a gene at a second locus​ ] - For example, in Labrador retrievers and many other mammals, coat color depends on two genes ​ - One gene determines the pigment color (with alleles B for black and b for brown) ​ - The other gene (with alleles E for color and e for no color) determines whether the pigment will be deposited in the hair - If heterozygous black labs (genotype BbEe) are mated, we might expect the dihybrid F2 ratio of 9:3:3:1​ - However, a Punnett square shows that the phenotypic ratio will be 9 black to 3 chocolate to 4 yellow labs ​- Epistatic interactions produce a variety of ratios, all of which are modified versions of 9:3:3:1​
Polygenic inheritance
- In polygenic inheritance, multiple genes independently affect a single trait​ - Height is a good example of polygenic inheritance; over 180 genes affect height​ - Skin pigmentation in humans is also controlled by many separately inherited genes​
Quantitative characters
- Quantitative characters are those that vary in the population along a continuum​ - Quantitative variation usually indicates polygenic inheritance, an additive effect of two or more genes on a single phenotype​
The Environmental Impact on Phenotype​
- Another departure from simple Mendelian genetics arises when the phenotype for a character depends on environment as well as genotype​ - The phenotypic range is broadest for polygenic characters​ - Traits that depend on multiple genes combined with environmental influences are called multifactorial​
Multifactorial
Traits that depend on multiple genes combined with environmental influences are called multifactorial​
What are included in an organism's phenotype?
- An organism’s phenotype includes all aspects of its physical appearance, internal anatomy, physiology, and behavior​ - An organism’s phenotype reflects its overall genotype and unique environmental history​