G ENETICS Populations and Ecosystems Investigation 9.

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GENETICS Populations and Ecosystems Investigation 9

Transcript of G ENETICS Populations and Ecosystems Investigation 9.

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GENETICSPopulations and Ecosystems

Investigation 9

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INHERITANCE

Passing on genetic information from one generation to the next is called inheritance.

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INHERITANCE

Augustinian monk, Gregor Mendel, was the pioneer of inheritance with his work on pea plants.

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MENDEL’S OBSERVATIONS

There was variation in the color of the flowers of pea plants.

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MENDEL’S OBSERVATIONS

When both parent pea plants had purple flowers, the offspring had purple flowers

When both parent pea plants had white flowers, the offspring had white flowers.

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MENDEL’S OBSERVATIONS

What happened when one parent had purple flowers and one had white flowers?

What color flowers would the offspring have? Purple? White? Pale Lavender?

Make a prediction!

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MENDEL’S CONCLUSIONS

Mendel found that the flowers were either all purple or all white. There were no pale lavender (purple) flowers.

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MENDEL’S CONCLUSIONS

Mendel reasoned that the offspring must be inheriting something from each parent that told the pea plan what color

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CELLS ROLE IN INHERITANCE

Information describing how to make you resides in the cells.

Inside cells, there are smaller structures called organelles (“little organs”) that perform functions essential to life.

One of the key organelles is the nucleus (a.k.a. “control center” of the cell.)

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DNA

Inside the nucleus is the inheritance messenger, DNA.

DNA molecules are huge, containing millions of atoms.

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CHROMOSOMES

In order for them to fit inside the nucleus, they are coiled into structures called chromosomes.

Chromosomes are the structures that carry the message of inheritance.

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CHROMOSOMES

Chromosomes always come in pairs.

Both chromosomes in a pair have dark areas in exactly the same location called alleles (a version of a gene.)

Different alleles produce variations ininherited characteristics, such as eye color or blood type.

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ALLELE

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GENES

Two alleles on the paired chromosomes work together and constitute a gene.

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SUMMARIZING NOTES

Nuclei contain chromosomes.

Chromosomes come in almost identical pairs.

Chromosomes have specific active locations called alleles.

The two alleles in identical locations on paired chromosomes constitute a gene.

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GENE (CONTINUED)

A gene (two alleles working together) controls a trait.

A genes determine eye color, hair color, etc…. Alleles are the code that determines the traits of

an organism.

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GENOTYPE

The combination of alleles in an organism’s chromosomes is the organism’s genotype.

The genotype lists the paired alleles that are particular to that organism.

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DOMINANT AND RECESSIVE

Most-influential alleles are dominant alleles. Represented by an uppercase letter.

Less-influential alleles are called recessive alleles. Represented by a lower case letter.

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PHENOTYPE

Every organism has its unique genotype, composed of paired alleles on paired chromosomes that produce unique traits in those organisms.

The traits that the genotype produces results in the organism’s phenotype.