V4 Inheritance 1

Planning until the test week:
- Today (1 Feb): inheritance (genes, alleles & loci, dominant/ recessive, homozygous/heterozygous, genotype/phenotype)
- Friday (4 Feb): inheritance (monohybrid inheritance, continuous and discontinuous variation)
- Tuesday (7 Feb): preparation for test (last questions, 30 seconds with terms)



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Slide 1: Slide
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This lesson contains 10 slides, with text slides.

Items in this lesson

Planning until the test week:
- Today (1 Feb): inheritance (genes, alleles & loci, dominant/ recessive, homozygous/heterozygous, genotype/phenotype)
- Friday (4 Feb): inheritance (monohybrid inheritance, continuous and discontinuous variation)
- Tuesday (7 Feb): preparation for test (last questions, 30 seconds with terms)



Slide 1 - Slide

Goals for today:
- Know the difference between a gene, an allele and a locus
- Know what dominant and recessive alleles are
- Know the difference between genotype and phenotype
- Be able to calculate the probability of inheriting a certain trait in monohybrid inheritance



Slide 2 - Slide

Gregor Mendel (1822-84)
                 :

Slide 3 - Slide

Genes, alleles, loci and chromosomes
Recall: a gene codes for a protein. This protein will have certain traits, determined by the gene.

Every gene is located at a fixed place in the genome. This place is called a locus (plural: loci).

Different versions of a gene can be found in every population. Each different version is called an allele. 


Slide 4 - Slide

To inherit = to receive a characteristic from an ancestor by genetic transmission. 

  • Genotype = complete set of all inherited characteristics. 
  • Example: the plant has one allele for purple flowers (P) and one allele for white flowers (p)

  • Phenotype = set of characteristics that are seen/expressed. 
  • Example: the plant produces purple flowers.

Phenotype = genotype + pattern of gene expression + environmental factors. 

Slide 5 - Slide

Letter notation for genes en alleles
Complete dominance
A letter is assigned to the gene *
dominante allele: capital letter   (A)
recessive allele: lowercase letter   (a)

Genotypes
homozygous dominant:    AA
heterozygous:                       Aa (convention: you never write aA)
homozygous recessive:      aa

* = if you choose a letter yourself, choose a letter that has a clearly different capital letter vs. lowercase letter (e.g. Aa and Hh are better than Ss or Oo). 

Slide 6 - Slide

Incomplete dominance
Sometimes the recessive allele also influences the phenotype just slightly
Sometimes both alleles are evenly dominant in determining the phenotype
A homozygous plant with two alleles for red flowers produces red flowers.

A homozygous plant with two alleles for white flowers produces white flowers.

A heterozygous plant with both an allele for red flowers and for white flowers produces pink flowers.

Because both alleles are evenly dominant, both are determining the phenotype together.
The resulting phenotype is called an intermediate phenotype.

Slide 7 - Slide

small revision 
What's the difference between ... 
  • an allele and a gene?
  • genotype and phenotype?
  • homozygous and heterozygous?
  • dominant and recessive? 

Slide 8 - Slide

Monohybrid cross worksheet
- no phones (unless permission asked)
- yes music (using computer)
- no distracting each other
- yes working together

Slide 9 - Slide

Convention rules in genetics:
USE CAPITAL LETTERS FOR DOMINANT ALLELES
and
lower case letters for recessive alleles
(Tip: avoid using non distinct letter like Ww or Ss rather use Hh)

Slide 10 - Slide