1 / 23

Genetics: The Study of Biological Heredity

Genetics: The Study of Biological Heredity. Do Now: If you flip a coin twice, what is the probability it will come up heads twice? What is the probability it will come up heads once and tails once? What is the probability it will come up tails twice?.

dacia
Download Presentation

Genetics: The Study of Biological Heredity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genetics: The Study of Biological Heredity Do Now: If you flip a coin twice, what is the probability it will come up heads twice? What is the probability it will come up heads once and tails once? What is the probability it will come up tails twice?

  2. Genetics is the study of heredity in living organisms. • Heredity is the transmission of traits or characteristics from parents to their offspring Basic Definitions – not on notes

  3. Genes are found on chromosomes • A gene is the instructions for making a single protein Chromosomes = DNA

  4. DNA is a chemical code that carries information. • Genes are pieces of DNA DNA is a CODE

  5. Chromosomes are long pieces of DNA that contain many genes. • Humans have 46 chromosomes Chromosomes are DNA

  6. Homologous Chromosomes • Every cell contains two copies of each chromosome. To put it another way, autosomes come in pairs. These two chromosomes are called HOMOLOGUS CHROMOSOMES. Genes for eye color are found at The same location on both Chromosomes. The gene for brown Eyes I got from my dad is in exactly The same location on one chromosome As the gene for blue eyes I got from my Mom on the other homologous Chromosome. Specific genes are found in the Same location on each homolugous Chromosome. Consider me for example…

  7. Diploid and Haploid Cells • Cells are considered diploid when they have 2 copies of each chromosome. Most of your body’s cells are diploid. • Cells are haploid if they have only one copy of each chromosome pair. This is the case for gametes, like sperm and egg cells, used for reproduction.

  8. Diploid vs. Haploid

  9. Normal Karyotype • Humans almost always have 23 pairs of homologous chromosomes. • Is this karyotype of a male or female?

  10. You, like most animals, are diploid. • To reproduce, you make haploid cells (sperm & egg) through meiosis. • During reproduction, haploid gametes from two parents combine (fertilization) to make a new diploid organism. • Thus, only half of an organism’s genetic information is passed on to its offspring Basic Genetics

  11. A trait is a characteristic. For example, brown eye color is a trait most humans have. • A gene is a part of a chromosome that carries information for one trait. For example, humans have one major eye color gene. • An allele is a certain form of a gene. In humans, the most common eye color alleles are brown and blue. Genes, Alleles, and Traits

  12. Meiosis is cell division that makes haploid gametes. • The chromosome number is reduced by ½. • Only 1 of each homologous pair of chromosomes gets passed on to the offspring. Meiosis

  13. The 2 chromosomes shown are a homologous pair. • The chromosomes carry different genes. • What % of the haploid cells have the red allele? • What % have the blue allele? Follow the alleles

  14. Since there is an equal chance of each chromosome ending up in an offspring, it’s similar to flipping a coin. Probability

  15. Make A Prediction Please Write: If the two pea plants shown were crossed (mated), what % of the offspring do you predict will be purple? Why?

  16. Anyone Predict 100% Purple? • The first plant was PURE BREEDING for purple flowers – meaning when it was SELF-FERTILIZED all of the offspring had purple flowers. • The second plant was pure breeding for white flowers. • Which flower color would you describe as DOMINANT in pea plants?

  17. Mendel “Father of Genetics” Gregor Mendel1822-1884 • Monk from Austria • Studied statistics at the University of Vienna • Garden enthusiast • High school teacher  • The importance of his discoveries was only understood and appreciated years after his death

  18. Mendel’s Experiments • Make another prediction: • If two of the offspring from the first cross (the ones that were all purple), what % of the offspring would be purple? Why?

  19. A Word About Plants (Angiosperms = flowering plants)

  20. From Seed to Seedling

  21. Back to the Genetics • Approximatly 75% of the offspring will have purple flowers. Mendel’s study of probability and statistics led him to hypothesize that each plant had two “factors” controlling flower color, one from each parent. How did he know???

  22. Probability • If you flip a coin, what is the probability it will come up heads? • What is that probability expressed as a decimal? • If something has a probability of 1.0 will it happen? • You just flipped a coin 4 times and it came up tails all 4 tries. What is the probability it will come up tails if you flip it again? • If you flip a coin twice, what is the probability it will come up heads both times?

  23. Classical Genetics is Based on Probability! • You have 2 copies of each gene, but only one copy or the other is passed on to your offspring. • Which copy of the gene that gets passed on is random. • This is exactly what was happening in the pea plants – see if you can come up with an explanation tonight!

More Related