Transcript
Page 1: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

MENDELIAN GENETICS

Page 2: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Gregor MendelAustrian Monk

1822-1884

The Father of Modern Genetics

Page 3: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

The use of pea plants Mendel used pea plants for

his studies…but why?Many different observable

traitsReproduced very quicklyHe could control which plants

reproduced with each other

Page 4: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Traits that he was observing Round vs. wrinkled pea shape Tall vs. short Yellow vs. green color

Traits were easily seen from generation to generation

Allele- alternative versions of a trait or gene…such as tall vs. short or T vs. t

Page 5: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Homozygous vs. Heterozygous

Homozygous- The alleles in a pair are identicalTT or tt

Heterozygous- The alleles in a pair are differentTt

Page 6: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Genotype vs. Phenotype

Genotype Phenotype

The genetic make-up of an organism

Bb, BB, or bb

The outward appearance of an organism

Example: Brown Hair, tall, blue eyes, etc.

Page 7: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Mendel’s Laws

Rule of Unit Factors- each organism has 2 factors that control each of its traits

You have 2 alleles for each trait…one from each parent!

Page 8: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Mendel’s Laws (continued…) Rule of Dominance- Within any

characteristic one allele appears more often than the other. This may give the appearance that that allele is stronger and the other is weak.

If you have a brown hair allele from mom and a blond hair allele from dad, you would only see brown because it is dominant to blond.

Page 9: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Mendel’s Laws (continued…) Law of segregation-Each organism can

produce 2 different types of gametes because it has 2 different alleles.

During fertilization, male a female gametes randomly pair to form 4 combinations of alleles

Page 10: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Mendel’s Laws (continued…) Law of Independent Assortment- Genes

for different traits are inherited independent of each other.

Page 11: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Punnett Squares A chart used to solve genetic

problems

Page 12: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Rules for Making a Punnett Square Female gametes (eggs) go down the

side Male gametes (sperm) go across the top Capital letters = dominant Lower Case letters = recessive

Page 13: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Monohybrid Cross

Showing only one trait.

Page 14: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Probability

Page 15: Gregor Mendel Austrian Monk 1822-1884 The Father of Modern Genetics

Dihybrid Cross


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