gregor mendel father of genetics how do we acquire our traits?
Post on 04-Jan-2016
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Gregor Mendel
Father of Genetics
How do we acquire our traits?
His Experiments
• Selective cross breeding of pea plants (Pisum sativum)
His findings
• Traits appear without blending– Ex. A purple flower pea plant mixed with a white
flower pea plant would not produce light purple flowers. The results would be: purple or white
Terms:
• Allele: two or more forms of a gene. Example: Pea Color: Green (Y) Yellow (y)
• Dominant: Allele that is expressed or dominant (Y), even in the presence of a recessive allele. Shown by capital letter
• Recessive: Allele that is only expressed when paired with another recessive allele (y). Can be masked, and carried into future generations
• Homozygous: 2 of the same alleles ex. YY or yy• Heterzygous: 2 different alleles ex. Yy• Genotype: Allele description of a trait YY, Yy or
yy• Phenotype: Word description of a trait– YY – Green– Yy – Green– yy - yellow
Terms:
The Principle of Segregation
• Only one gene is passed from the parent to the offspring
Segregation of alleles in the production of sex cells
Principle of Independent Assortment
• Each time a gene is passed, does not depend on the time before.
• Ex. Pea plant could be Yy (a gene for green and a gene for yellow) and Tt (gene for Tall and gene for short)– 1st cross the plant could pass the y– 2nd cross could pass the Y– Passing of the Tall or short gene is INDEPENDENT
of the passing of the color gene
Why do we look similar but different?
Exit Slip
• What do you know now that you didn’t know before class today?
• What did you already know?• What questions do you still have?
More Definitions
• Heredity – traits passed on to the next generation– Ex. Eye color, hair color, shape of hairline, earlobes
attached or unattached, heart disease, diabetes, cancer
• Gene – unit of heredity passed from the parent to the offspring (babies)
• Carrier – carries the recessive gene, but does not show it– Ex. A person can have brown eyes (Bb) but carry the
gene for blue eyes (b)
• Purebred – bred from parents of the same variety (all the same genes!) – Example: TT x TT all tall plants– tt x tt all short plants
• Hybrid – bred from parents with different genotypes (not necessarily different phenotypes)– Tt x Tt could give tall, or short plants
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