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BIOLOGY CHAPTER 6 & 7 Meiosis and Mendelian Genetics

Biology chapter 6 & 7

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Mrs. Ruhlig's Biology B PowerPoint Chapter 6 &7

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Page 1: Biology chapter 6 & 7

BIOLOGY CHAPTER 6 & 7Meiosis and Mendelian Genetics

Page 2: Biology chapter 6 & 7

6.1 & 6.2 CHROMOSOMES AND MEIOSIS 6.6 MEIOSIS AND GENETIC VARIATION

Mitosis Somatic cells undergo mitosis One diploid cell produces 2 genetically

identical, diploid cells There are 4 stages (prophase,

metaphase, anaphase, telophase) DNA is copied once and divided once Mitosis is used for development, growth,

and repair

Page 3: Biology chapter 6 & 7

Meiosis Germ cells produce gametes (sex cells)

during meiosis One diploid cell produces 4 genetically

different haploid cells There are 8 stages (prophase I,

metaphase I, anaphase I, telophase I, prophase II, metaphase II, anaphase II, telophase II)

DNA is copied once and divided twice

Page 4: Biology chapter 6 & 7

Homologous Chromosomes Half of an organism’s chromosomes come

from the mother, and half from the father. The chromosomes pair up to form homologous chromosomes

Homologous chromosomes are two chromosomes with the same length, general appearance, and the same type of genes

The pairing of the genes on the homologous chromosomes are what code for all of an organism’s traits (see examples in section 6.4)

Page 5: Biology chapter 6 & 7

All humans have 23 total pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 46 chromosomes.

22 of the pairs are autosomes (body chromosomes)

1 pair is the sex chromosomes (XX= female, XY=male)

Page 6: Biology chapter 6 & 7

Meiosis I Same steps as mitosis, except during

Prophase I crossing over can occur(see below),

during Metaphase I homologous chromosomes pair up in the middle and

during Anaphase I, the sister chromatids DO NOT separate

By the end of Meiosis I, there are 2 haploid cells

Page 7: Biology chapter 6 & 7

Crossing Over Homologous chromosomes exchange

genes This results in a new combination of

genes (called recombination) Genes that are located near each other

on a chromosome are more likely to be moved (or crossed over) together. This is called genetic linkage (refer to page 191)

Meiosis II This is exactly the same as mitosis

Page 8: Biology chapter 6 & 7

6.3 MENDEL AND HEREDITY

Gregor Mendel An Austrian monk who is known as the

“father of genetics” He discovered that traits (genes) are

inherited from parents by working with pea plants

He made both purebred plants and crossed plants to see what the results would be.

Page 9: Biology chapter 6 & 7

WHY PEA PLANTS?

They reproduce quickly They can both self-pollinate(creating

purebreds) and cross-pollinate(creating a mix of traits)

They have “either-or” traits (the traits do not mix to make a 3rd trait, ex. The purple flowers and white flowers don’t mix to make a pink flower)

(refer to page 179 to see the traits and results of Mendel’s experiment)

Page 10: Biology chapter 6 & 7

MENDEL’S CONCLUSIONS

Mendel’s Law of Segregation: Organisms inherit two copies of each

gene, one from each parent Organisms donate only one copy of each

gene in their gametes. Thus, the two copies of each gene segregate, or separate, during gamete formation (Law of Independent Assortment)

In other words, the Law of Ind. Assortment is saying that traits are inherited separately.

Page 11: Biology chapter 6 & 7

6.4 TRAITS, GENES, AND ALLELES 6.5 TRAITS AND PROBABILITIES

Genes Each gene has a specific locus, or place

on the chromosome A gene is a piece of DNA that provides a

set of instructions to make a certain protein. The proteins then code for traits.

Each trait is represented by alleles.

Page 12: Biology chapter 6 & 7

Letters are used to represent different alleles. There are two alleles per trait (one from mother, one from father)

Dominant alleles are represented by capital letters and Recessive alleles are represented by lowercase letters

Dominant alleles will always overpower the recessive alleles.

Page 13: Biology chapter 6 & 7

EXAMPLE: P= purple flowersp= white flowers

PP=purple flowers (homozygous)pp= white flowers (homozygous)Pp= purple flowers (heterozygous)  Genotype-the alleles/genetic code (PP or

Pp) Phenotype-the physical trait (purple or

white)

Page 14: Biology chapter 6 & 7

PUNNET SQUARES

Punnet squares are used to predict the outcome of genotypes when crossing two organisms

Monohybrid cross- crosses one trait (always yields a 3:1 phenotypic ratio)

Dihybrid cross- crosses two traits (always yield 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio)

Page 15: Biology chapter 6 & 7

CHAPTER 7 EXTENDING MENDELIAN GENETICS

Complex Patterns of InheritanceIncomplete Dominance—the trait is in between the dominant and recessive

Ex. RR=red rr=white Rr=pink

Codominance—both traits are expressed at the same time

Ex. RR=red rr=white Rr= both red and white

Page 16: Biology chapter 6 & 7

Polygenic Traits—when two or more genes influence a trait Ex. Human eye color(at least 3 different

genes), human skin color (4 different genes)

Environmental factors—when the environment plays a role in gene expression Ex. Sea turtle eggs become female in

warmer temps and male in colder temps

Page 17: Biology chapter 6 & 7

SEX-LINKED TRAITS—TRAITS CAUSED BY GENES LOCATED ON THE SEX CHROMOSOMES

The X contains many genes The Y only determines sex (male) A male is XY, so all of the alleles on the X

are expressed in a male, even the recessive ones

A female is XX, so dominant alleles can mask the recessive ones

Carriers—those who carry a recessive genetic disorder, but do not express the phenotype. They can pass on the disorder to their offspring