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Lecture Mendelian Genetics

Genes located on chromosomes determine inherited traits, with each parent contributing one of two alleles for each gene that are passed onto offspring during reproduction. Gregor Mendel's experiments with pea plants established the fundamental laws of inheritance, including that traits are inherited as discrete units (genes) and that dominant alleles mask recessive alleles. His work demonstrated that offspring from a cross between two true-breeding parents will result in predictable ratios of phenotypes in subsequent generations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
97 views21 pages

Lecture Mendelian Genetics

Genes located on chromosomes determine inherited traits, with each parent contributing one of two alleles for each gene that are passed onto offspring during reproduction. Gregor Mendel's experiments with pea plants established the fundamental laws of inheritance, including that traits are inherited as discrete units (genes) and that dominant alleles mask recessive alleles. His work demonstrated that offspring from a cross between two true-breeding parents will result in predictable ratios of phenotypes in subsequent generations.

Uploaded by

Sunil Dhatwalia
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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chromosome

cell

base pair
(double
helix)
DNA

genes

2
Introduction to Genetics
 What is genetics?
• “Genetics is the study of heredity, the process in which a
parent passes certain genes onto their children.”

 What does that mean?


• Children inherit their biological parents’ genes that
express specific traits, such as some physical
characteristics, natural talents, and genetic disorders.
Introduction to Genetics

• Chromosomes carry the hereditary


information (genes)
• Arrangement of nucleotides in DNA
• DNA  RNA  Proteins
• Chromosomes (and genes) occur in pairs
Homologous Chromosomes
• New combinations of genes occur in sexual
reproduction
– Fertilization from two parents
Gregor Johann Mendel
• Austrian Monk, born in what is now Czech Republic in
1822
• Son of peasant farmer, studied
Theology and was ordained
priest Order St. Augustine.
• Went to the university of Vienna, where he
studied botany and learned the Scientific Method
• Worked with pure lines of peas for eight years
• Prior to Mendel, heredity was regarded as a "blending"
process and the offspring were essentially a "dilution"of
the different parental characteristics.
Mendel’s peas
• Mendel looked at seven traits or characteristics of
pea plants:
• In 1866 he published Experiments in Plant
Hybridization, (Versuche über Pflanzen-
Hybriden) in which he established his three
Principles of Inheritance
• He tried to repeat his work
in another plant, but didn’t
work because the plant
reproduced asexually! If…
• Work was largely ignored for
34 years, until 1900, when
3 independent botanists
rediscovered Mendel’s work.
• Mendel was the first biologist to use
Mathematics – to explain his results
quantitatively.
• Mendel predicted
The concept of genes
That genes occur in pairs
That one gene of each pair is
present in the gametes
Genetics terms you need to know:
• Gene – a unit of heredity;
a section of DNA sequence
encoding a single protein
• Genome – the entire set
of genes in an organism

• Alleles – two genes that occupy the same position


on homologous chromosomes and that cover the
same trait (like ‘flavors’ of a trait).
• Locus – a fixed location on a strand of DNA
where a gene or one of its alleles is located.
• Homozygous – having identical genes (one
from each parent) for a particular characteristic.
• Heterozygous – having two different genes for
a particular characteristic.

• Dominant – the allele of a gene that masks or


suppresses the expression of an alternate allele;
the trait appears in the heterozygous condition.
• Recessive – an allele that is masked by a
dominant allele; does not appear in the
heterozygous condition, only in homozygous.
• Genotype – the genetic makeup of an organisms
• Phenotype – the physical appearance
of an organism (Genotype + environment)

• Monohybrid cross: a genetic cross involving a


single pair of genes (one trait); parents differ by a
single trait.
• P = Parental generation
• F1 = First filial generation; offspring from a
genetic cross.
• F2 = Second filial generation of a genetic cross
Monohybrid cross
• Parents differ by a single trait.
• Crossing two pea plants that differ in stem size,
one tall one short
T = allele for Tall
t = allele for dwarf

TT = homozygous tall plant


t t = homozygous dwarf plant

TT  tt
Monohybrid cross for stem length:
P = parentals TT  tt
true breeding, (tall) (dwarf)
homozygous plants:

F1 generation Tt
is heterozygous: (all tall plants)
Dihybrid crosses
• Matings that involve parents that differ in two
genes (two independent traits)
For example, flower color:
P = purple (dominant)

p = white (recessive)

and stem length:

T = tall t = short
Dihybrid cross: flower color and
stem length
TT PP  tt pp
(tall, purple) (short, white)

Possible Gametes for parents tp tp tp tp

T P and t p TP TtPp TtPp TtPp TtPp


TP TtPp TtPp TtPp TtPp
TP TtPp TtPp TtPp TtPp
TP TtPp TtPp TtPp TtPp
F1 Generation: All tall, purple flowers (Tt Pp)
Dihybrid cross: flower color and
stem length (shortcut)
TT PP  tt pp
(tall, purple) (short, white)

Possible Gametes for parents


T P
TP tp
t p Tt Pp

F1 Generation: All tall, purple flowers (Tt Pp)


Dihybrid cross F2
If F1 generation is allowed to self pollinate,
Mendel observed 4 phenotypes:
Tt Pp  Tt Pp
(tall, purple) (tall, purple)
TP Tp tP tp
Possible gametes:
TP Tp tP tp TP TTPP TTPp TtPP TtPp
Tp TTPp TTpp TtPp Ttpp
tP TtPP TtPp ttPP ttPp
tp TtPp Ttpp ttPp ttpp
Four phenotypes observed
Tall, purple (9); Tall, white (3); Short, purple (3); Short white (1)
Dihybrid cross

9 Tall purple
TP Tp tP tp

TP TTPP TTPp TtPP TtPp


3 Tall white Tp TTPp TTpp TtPp Ttpp
tP TtPP TtPp ttPP ttPp
tp TtPp Ttpp ttPp ttpp
3 Short purple

Phenotype Ratio = 9:3:3:1


1 Short white
Dihybrid cross: 9 genotypes
Genotype ratios (9): Four Phenotypes:
1 TTPP
2 TTPp Tall, purple (9)
2 TtPP
4 TtPp
1 TTpp
Tall, white (3)
2 Ttpp
1 ttPP
Short, purple (3)
2 ttPp
1 ttpp Short, white (1)

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