m4 - Patterns of Mendelian Inheritance
m4 - Patterns of Mendelian Inheritance
MENDELIAN
INHERITANCE
MODULE 4
MENDEL AND
HIS GARDEN PEAS
• Gregor Mendel was an
Augustinian monk in a
monastery in Brünn, Austria-
Hungarian Empire (now Brno,
Czech Republic).
MENDEL AND
HIS GARDEN PEAS
• He was interested in investigating how
individual traits were inherited.
• He wanted to find out whether both
parents contributed equally to the traits of
the offspring and if the traits present in
the offspring were produced by the
blending of the traits of the parents.
MENDEL AND
HIS GARDEN PEAS
• Using the garden in the monastery,
he performed series of breeding
experiments involving garden pea
plant (Pisum sativum).
MENDEL’S EXPERIMENT
Mendel conducted his experiments on garden peas using three
steps:
First:
Production of the pure-breeding strains of pea plants. He
allowed several populations of garden pea plants to self-pollinate
for many generations until he was able to gather seeds that
produced only one particular trait.
MENDEL’S EXPERIMENT
Second:
The crossing of two different varieties of pure breeding strains. He
took pollens from the anther of the purple-colored flower and
transferred them into the stigma of the white-colored flower. He called
these two varieties of garden peas as the P1 or first parental generations.
When the garden peas produced seeds, he gathered and planted them
separately. Mendel found out that that the garden peas all produced
purple-colored flowers. He labeled the first set of offspring as F1 or first
filial generation. The second phase of Mendel’s work can be
summarized as:
MENDEL’S EXPERIMENT
MENDEL’S EXPERIMENT
Third:
The crossing of the F1 generations. Finally, Mendel pollinated the
F1 generation. He called this as the P2 or second parental generations.
Likewise, he gathered and planted the seeds. When the seeds
germinated and produced flowers, he noticed that 75% of the garden
peas had purpled-colored flowers and the 25% had white-colored
flowers. He labelled this second set of offspring as the F2 or second
filial generation. The white colored-flowers that did not appear in the F1
generation appeared in a ratio of 3:1. This third phase can be
summarized as:
MENDEL’S EXPERIMENT
MENDELIAN PRINCIPLES
THE LAW OF COMPLETE DOMINANCE
When a pure breeding parent carrying a “stronger”
characteristic is crossed or bred with another pure breeding parent
carrying a “weaker” characteristic, their offspring will carry or
manifest the “stronger” characteristic possessed by one parent. In
phase 2 of Mendel’s work, the purple-color manifested among the
F1 generation. Therefore, purple color is dominant characteristics.
The white color that did not manifest is the recessive
characteristic.
MENDELIAN PRINCIPLES
THE LAW OF COMPLETE DOMINANCE
The non-appearance of the recessive characteristic
does not mean it was totally lost. Mendel
hypothesized that it was just hidden and masked by
the dominant purple color. The third phase of his
experiment proved that he was right. The recessive
white color appeared even in a small percentage.
MENDELIAN PRINCIPLES
MENDELIAN PRINCIPLES
PRINCIPLE OF ALLELISM
The characteristics carried by any organism are controlled by “genes”,
Mendel did not know yet anything about genes during his time. According to
him, the characteristics of an organism are determined by certain factors, which
he described as elemente. These factors are in pairs. Now we know that a pair of
genes is called alleles. Capital or upper-case letters represent dominant genes,
and the lower-case letters represent recessive genes. In the case of the pure
breeding parents (P1), purple color is represented by PP and white color is
represented by pp. If the pair of alleles is the same (PP or pp), it is a homozygous
pair; if the pair of alleles is unlike (Pp), it is a heterozygous pair. The upper-case
letter always written before the lower-case letter.
MENDELIAN PRINCIPLES
PRINCIPLE OF ALLELISM
A genotype is an individual's collection of genes.
The term also can refer to the two alleles inherited for
a particular gene. The genotype is expressed when the
information encoded in the genes' DNA is used to
make protein and RNA molecules.
MENDELIAN PRINCIPLES
PRINCIPLE OF ALLELISM
RECESSIVE
TWO alleles are needed for the trait to be expressed.
There are 4 main types of
genetic inheritance:
• Dominant
• Recessive
• Codominance
• Incomplete Dominance
DOMINANT
White with brown spots is a dominant trait.