genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

54
Genetics Chapter 2 Part 1 Dr. Tricia Hardt Smith [email protected]

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Page 1: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Genetics Chapter 2 Part 1

Dr. Tricia Hardt Smith

[email protected]

Page 2: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

State of genetics in early State of genetics in early 1800’s1800’s

What is inherited?

How is it inherited?

What is the role of chance in heredity?

Page 3: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Johann Gregor Mendel(1822-1884)

Born to simple farmers in the Czeh Republic

1843: Augustinian monastery (Brno)

1851-53: University of Vienna; Physics Institute

Mathmatics, chemistry, entomology, paleotology, botany, plant physiology

1856-1863: Pea plant breeding experiments

1866: Published his findings

1900: Three botanists (De Vries, von Tschermak & Correns) independently conduct the same experiments, come across Mendel’s paper and draw attention to his work.

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Mendelian genetics

• Mendel’s work unnoticed until 1900’s

• Introduced concept of “units of inheritance”

• When correlated with cytological data → Transmission genetics was born

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Mendel’s workplace

Fig. 2.5

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Chapter 2 Opener

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Why pea plants?

• Reproduce well.• Each seed is a new individual, can

measure the characteristics of a large number of offspring after one breeding season

• Grow to maturity in single season

Easy to grow and hybridize artificially

Page 8: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Mendel’s Approach

• Mendel obtained 34 different varieties of peas from local suppliers and examined the characteristics of each

• He identified 14 strains representing seven specific traits each with two forms that could be easily distinguished. He spent two years making sure these varities bred true.

• He worked with these strains for 5 years, determining how each character was inherited

Jos A. Smith

Page 9: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)
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1900 - Carl Correns, Hugo deVries, and Erich von

Tschermak rediscover and confirm Mendel’s laws.

Mendel published in 1866, was not

appreciated in his lifetime.

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Mendel’s Approach Followed the Modern Scientific Method

1. Make initial observations about a phenomenon or process

2. Formulate a testable hypothesis

3. Design a controlled experiment to test the hypothesis

4. Collect data from the experiment

5. Interpret the experimental results, comparing them to those expected under the hypothesis

6. Draw a conclusion and reformulate the hypothesis if necessary

One of Mendel’s strengths was his

careful experimental

design

Page 12: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Five Critical Experimental Innovations

• There were five features of Mendel’s breeding experiments that were critical to his success

• Controlled crosses

• Use of pure breeding strains

• Selection of dichotomous traits

• Quantification of results

• Use of replicate (repeated), reciprocal, and test crosses

• Luck?

Page 13: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Controlled Crosses Between Plants

• Pea plants are capable of self-fertilization and artificial cross-fertilization

• Self-fertilization occurs naturally

• Cross-fertilization involves removing the anthers from a flower and introducing pollen of the desired type with a small brush

From Peirce Genetics

Page 14: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)
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Pure-Breeding Strains to Begin Experimental Crosses

• Mendel took 2 years prior to beginning his experiments to establish pure-breeding (or true-breeding) strains

• Each experiment began with crosses between two pure-breeding parental generation plants (P generation) that produced offspring called F1 (first filial generation)

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Monohybrid Crosses

Smooth Seeds

Wrinkled Seeds

Female Male

Monohybrid Cross: a cross-pollination involving two true-breeding lines that differ for only one trait

“P”

“F1”Progeny:

All progeny had smooth seed!“First Filial generation”

“Parental generation”

Parents:

All progeny had same PHENOTYPE: “the form that is shown”

Page 17: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Monohybrid Crosses

Smooth Seeds

Wrinkled Seeds

Female Male

Two possible Hypotheses

Hypothesis 2: The child’s phenotype is determined by the mother’s phenotype

Hypothesis 1: The smooth phenotype is “dominant” to the wrinkled phenotype

“P”

“F1”How could you

differentiate between these possibilities?

Page 18: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Mendel Made Reciprocal CrossesReciprocal Cross: Repeating a particular genetic cross

but with the sexes of the two parents switched

All F1 had smooth seed.

Smooth Seeds

Wrinkled Seeds

Female Male

- The smooth trait is “dominant” to the wrinkled trait

Conclusion

- Phenotype is not determined by the mother’s phenotype

“P”

“F1”

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• The trait shown by the F1 offspring was called the dominant phenotype (round peas, e.g.)

• The other trait not apparent in the F1 was called the recessive phenotype (wrinkled)

• When F1 were crossed, 75% of the resulting F2 had the dominant trait, but the recessive trait reappeared in the other 25%

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Alleles

• Mendel’s results rejected the blending theory of heredity

• Theorized that plants carry two discrete hereditary units for each trait, alleles; a plant receives one of these in the egg and the second in pollen

• Together the two alleles for each trait determine the phenotype of the individual

Alleles

Phenotype

Page 23: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Homozygous and Heterozygous Individuals

• Pure-breeding individuals, like Mendel’s parent plants, have identical copies of the two alleles for a trait (homozygous individual)

• The F1 plants had different alleles from each parent and were heterozygous

Homozygous (TT & tt)

Heterozygous (Tt)

Page 24: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

• A 3:1 phenotypic ratio is predicted for the F2 produced by a monohybrid cross

• A 1:2:1 genotypic ratio is also predicted (¼ G/G, ½ G/g, ¼ g/g)

Now that we have a theory, we can do

some real predicting!

Now that we have a theory, we can do

some real predicting!

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Punnett Square

• The alleles (in gametes) carried by one parent are arranged along the top of the square and those of the other parent, down the side

• The results expected from random fusion of the gametes are placed within the square

R r

R

r

RR Rr

Rr rr

Punnett Square

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Mendel’s Results Revisited: F1

Smooth Seeds

Wrinkled Seeds

“AA”

“aa”

Gametes possible: “A” or “A”

Gametes possible: “a” or “a”

“Aa”

Smooth

Aa Aa

AaAa

a a

A

A

♂ Gametes

♀ G

ame

tes

Use a “Punnett Square” to determine all possible progeny genotypes

♂♀

Explains why all progeny were smooth

Genotype?Genotype?

Page 27: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Br rr

A

B

C

D

E

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What is the predicted cross of homozygous recessive red and heterozygous dominant brown?

A.All brownB.3 brown, 1 redC.2 brown, 2 redD.1 brown, 3 red

E.All red

All bro

wn

3 brown, 1

red

2 brown, 2

red

1 brown, 3

red

All red

20% 20%20%20%20%

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Br rr

A

B

C

D

E

Br

Br

rr

rr

B r

r

r

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Red + Brown = Blond! (sometimes?)Not all traits are dominant/reccessive!

More in upcoming lectures!

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Punnett Square Practice Problems!

Chapter 2: Problems 2 & 3

Page 32: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

Mendel’s First Law

• Mendel used his theory of particulate inheritance to formulate the law of segregation (Mendel’s first law)

• Alleles are separated into gametes. Gametes randomly combine to create progeny in predictable proportions.

• Hypothesis!: Mendel expected that half of the gametes of heterozygous F1 individuals would carry the dominant allele and half the recessive

• How can we test this?

Genotype?Genotype?

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Conclusion: all F1 plants are heterozygous!

Conclusion: all F1 plants are heterozygous!

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The Test Cross

• Allows to distinguish genotype of individual expressing dominant phenotype by crossing it with homozygous recessive individual

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What other predictions can we test?

• Mendel’s hypothesis predicts that F2 plants with the dominant phenotype can be homozygous or heterozygous

• The heterozygous state (2/3) is twice as likely as the homozygous state (1/3)

• HOW? Mendel used a self-fertilization experiment to test the predictions of the hypothesis

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F3 generation

• Hypothesis confirmed:

• 1/3 of plants were homozygous and breed true

• 2/3 of heterozygous F2 plants generated a 3:1 ratio of dominant:recessive phenotype among their progeny

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Page 39: Genetics chapter 2 part 1 (1)

WHAT HAPPENS IF WE STUDY TWO TRAITS?

Will the presence of one charastics affect the prescent of another?

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Dihybrid-Cross Analysis of Two Genes

• To study the simultaneous transmission of two traits, Mendel made dihybrid crosses between organisms that differed for two traits

• He began each cross with pure-breeding lines (e.g., RRGG and rrgg) and produced F1 that were heterozygous for both traits (e.g., RrGg).

• If assortment is random, four gametes should be equally likely in the F1 (e.g., RG, Rg, rG, rg)

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2.3 Dihybrid and Trihybrid Crosses

• How can we calculate the crosses of two or more traits at the same time?

• Dihybrid Punnet Square

• Forked Diagram

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An Aid to Prediction of Gamete Frequency

• The forked-line diagram is used to determine gamete genotypes and frequencies

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Let’s give it a try!

• Self Fertilization of a heterozygous yellow, round pea?

• Round (R) is dominant to wrinkled (r)

• Yellow (G) is dominant to green (g) • What does the dihybrid

Punnet square look like?

• What does the forked diagram look like?

F2 ?

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Independent Assortment of Alleles from the RrGg × RrGg Cross

• Mendel predicted that alleles of each locus unite at random to produce the F2, generating

• round, yellow R-G- (¾)(¾) = 9/16

• round, green R-gg (¾)(¼) = 3/16

• wrinkled, yellow rrG- (¾)(¼) = 3/16

• wrinkled, green rrgg (¼)(¼) = 1/16

9:3:3:1 ratio!9:3:3:1 ratio!The dihybrid ratio: 9/16 both dominant traits, 3/16 each for two combinations

of one dominant and one recessive, and 1/16 both recessives

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Mendel’s Second Law

• The 9:3:3:1 ratios generated in Mendel’s dihybrid crosses illustrate Mendel’s second law, also known as Mendel’s law of independent assortment

• The law states that during gamete formation the segregation of alleles at one locus is independent of the segregation of alleles at another locus.

• Within the 9:3:3:1 ratio, Mendel recognized two 3:1 ratios for each trait

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Testing Independent Assortment by Test-Cross Analysis

• Mendel wants to test his hypothesis about independent assortment. HOW?

• He predicted that the F1 seeds were dihybrid, of genotype RrGr, and that crossing them to a plant of genotype rrgg would yield four offspring phenotypes with equal frequency

Test Cross!

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Testing Independent Assortment by Trihybrid-Cross Analysis

• To test his hypothesis about independent assortment further, Mendel performed trihybrid-cross analysis

• The trihybrid cross involved three traits: round vs. wrinkled peas, yellow vs. green peas, and purple vs. white flowers

• The cross was: RRGGPP × rrggpp; the F1 were RrGgPp

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How many possible combinations?

• Double check yourself! Do you see all the possible combinations of phenotypes in your answer?

• The number of possibilities can be expressed as 2n, where n = number of genes

• In a trihybrid cross, there are 8 possibilties 23 = 8!

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Go try some problems!

• Chapter 2, problem 6

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Questions?