Genetics!. Objectives Analyze Meiosis and Mitosis Discuss Gregor Mendel and his contributions to...

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Genetics!

Transcript of Genetics!. Objectives Analyze Meiosis and Mitosis Discuss Gregor Mendel and his contributions to...

Page 1: Genetics!. Objectives Analyze Meiosis and Mitosis Discuss Gregor Mendel and his contributions to genetics.

Genetics!

Page 2: Genetics!. Objectives Analyze Meiosis and Mitosis Discuss Gregor Mendel and his contributions to genetics.

Objectives

• Analyze Meiosis and Mitosis• Discuss Gregor Mendel and his

contributions to genetics

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Essential Question

• Who was Gregor Mendel and what did he study?

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Back in the Day

• Gregor Mendel THE FATHER OF GENETICS

• 1822-1884• Priest • Study the inheritance traits in pea

plants • Not recognized until the 20th century

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What did Mendel Study?

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What did this mean?

• Selective Breeding • Crossbreeding• Heritability

– What traits get passed on?

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What about today?

• Crossbreeding breeds registered• Cross bred crops

– Aprium , Pluot, Grapple• Cross Bred Animals

– Black Baldie, Labordoodle • Biotechnology

– Fish in Strawberries to prevent freezer burn

– Sub- arctic fish genes pumped into strawberries

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Let’s Break it Down

• Where is the information coming from?

• Where is it stored?• What does it look like? • What information is carried?

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Where is the info coming from?

• Parents

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Where is it stored?

• Cells

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MitosisActivity:

Please draw on a

separate sheet of paper

Mitosis. On the back we

will draw Meiosis

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Meiosis

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What does it look like?

• Genotype• Phenotype

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What information is carried?

• Chromosomes

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Why follow genetics?

• Pedigree

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Activities

• Video; Intro to Genetics united Streaming

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Vocabulary: Please Define

• Heritability• Gregor Mendel• Gene• Chromosome • Genotype• Phenotype• Pedigree• Gamete

Cross BreedingSelective BreedingMitosisMeiosis

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Genetics!The Punnett Square

Middletown High School Spring 2009

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Objectives

• Analyze heritable traits• Calculate heritability using Punnett

Square Method

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Essential Question

• What does the Punnett Square represent/ Calculate?

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It started with a Pea [plant]

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What is a Punnett Square?

• an n × n square used in genetics to calculate the frequencies of the different genotypes and phenotypes among the offspring of a cross

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More than 1 trait

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Monohybrid vs. Dihybrid

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What does it mean?

• We can follow traits

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How to Punnett Square [Dance]

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Reading the Results

PERCENTAGES

RATIOS

1:2:1AA:Aa:aa

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Let’s Practice

• Worksheet- Punnett Practice

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Vocabulary

• Punnett Square• Heritability • Monohybrid• Dihybrid

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What do we look for?

Genetics in Animals

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Objectives

• Identify traits in animal breeding that are desirable based on breed and that are heritable

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Essential Question

• Where do you find information on heritable breed traits?

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General Concepts

• Certain traits are heritable • Hybrid vigor • Purebred

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Dogs

• What kind of traits would you want in YOUR dog? If you had:– Children– Small apartment– Sheep herd– Loved running ?

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Dogs

• Temperament can be bred for!– Especially aggression

• Watch for heritable health risks– Eye Problems

• Irish Setters and Progressive Retinal Atrophy • Collie Eye Anomaly • Cataracts • Entropion (eyelids turn in or out)

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Dogs- Heritable Health Contin

• Hips and Joints– Hip dysplasia

• Malformation/degeneration of the hip joint.– Retrievers, Cocker Spaniels, Shetland Sheepdog

– Osteochondrosis Dessicans (OCD) • Bone spur or flake wears away at joint.

– Present in dogs with OCD

– Pateller Luxation• Elbow/kneecap slides out of place locking leg

– Occurs more in smaller dogs

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Cats- Heritable Health • Polydactyly• Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

– Heart muscle thickens • Main Coon Cats

• Progressive Retinal Atrophy• Diabetes

– Burmese

• Feline Infectious Peritonitis – Some cats have a predisposition to the

development of FIA

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Cattle – Dairy Cattle

• Milk production• Milk Fat Content • Efficiency

– Feed intake to Milk Output

• Calving ability

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Sire Summary in Cow/Calf Op.s

Evaluation report

  Birth weight Weaning weight

Yearling weight

Maternal breeding value

EPD ACC EPD ACC EPD ACC EBV ACC DTS

Bull A -1.6 0.81 -2.7 0.79 -3.2 0.72 102 0.80 13

Bull B +2.4 0.90 +39.1 0.91 +70.0 0.83 103 0.76 11

Bull C +8.3 0.97 +53.8 0.97 +80.4 0.89 93 0.66 5

Advantage for progeny weaning weightsBull B vs. Bull A + 41.8 poundsBull C vs. Bull A + 56.5 poundsBull C vs. Bull B + 14.7 pounds

ACC = accuracyDTS = number of daughters

Table 1Example of sire summary data from the 1984 Angus sire summary

University of Missouri: Extension

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EPD

• EPD: Expected Progeny Difference: express the genetic transmitting ability of a sire. The EPD is reported as a plus or minus value in the unit in which the trait is measured.

• EPDs are calculated from a sire's progeny data. All bulls listed in the sire summary can be directly compared using EPD values. EPDs are an estimate of how a bull's progeny would be expected to perform compared to any other bull listed in the same summary.

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ACC

• ACC: Accuracy is a measure of how much the EPD value might change as additional progeny data become available. Sires with more calves in several different herds will have higher accuracy figures

• Select bulls to use based upon their EPD values and use the accuracy figure to determine how much to use a bull.

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MBV

• Maternal Breeding Value (MBV) describes how daughters of a bull are expected to produce compared to other cows in a herd. Once a bull's own daughters come into production, the MBV is calculated using the records of his own daughters in addition to those of his sire and paternal and maternal grandsires.

• Estimates of MBVs come from pedigree analysis, not sire evaluation

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DTS

• Number of Daughters.

• Why would this information be needed or relevant?

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Why perform strict analysis?

• Both commercial and seedstock producers should find sire summaries useful. A producer using AI can obtain semen from bulls that are superior in the traits of interest.

• Summaries also can be used to identify herds that excel in genetic merit and vice versa. A breeder who has several superior bulls listed in the report is a more reliable source of bulls than either the breeder who has no bulls listed or the breeder who has poorer than average bulls listed in the summary.

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Evaluating EPD’s Exercise Worth 50 points

• Using the booklet provided at your TABLE please:– 1. Read the Packet!– 2. Formulate a Vocabulary sheet for ALL

vocab words defined (all the abbreviations) – 3. Answer the worksheet questions in

groups.– 4. Write down any questions you have. – Due Thursday!!!!!!

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Once Finished EPD worksheet

• Summary Paper–1 paragraph double spaced

»Define the purpose of a Sire Summary. Who benefits from the sire summaries? What do sire summaries mean for producers? What information is provided on a sire summary?

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Genetic Terms to know

Middletown High School Spring 2009

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Objectives

• Define terms normally used when explaining and discussing genetics

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Essential Question

• Why is using appropriate terminology important in Veterinary Science?

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Genetic Vocabulary Review

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Co Dominance

• A condition in which both alleles of a gene pair in a heterozygote are fully expressed with neither one being dominant or recessive to the other

• Example: Roan coloring in cattle

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Roan Coloring in Cattle

• R is Red W is white

• F1 Generation– All Roan

• F2 Generation – 25% Red– 50% Roan– 25% White– 1:2:1 Ratio

R R

W RW RW

W RW RW

R W

R RR RW

W RW WW

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Sex Limited Genes

• Gene that exerts its effects primarily in one sex because of activation by androgens or estrogens

• Both sexes may have the gene• Example hen/rooster feathering

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Hen/Rooster Feathering

Genotype Female Phenotype

Male Phenotype

HH Hen feathering

Hen feathering

Hh Hen feathering

Hen feathering

hh Hen feathering

Cock Feathering

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Sex Determination• Mammals

– Determined at moment of fertilization– Female has regular chromosomes plus

an XX – Male has only 1 sex chromosome Y

• Birds– Females determine the sex of the

offspring Ma. X Y

X XX XY

X XX XY

Bi. Z Z

Z ZZ ZZ

W ZW ZW

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Sex Influenced Genes

• Trait expressed to different extents depending on the sex of the individual.

• Normally phenotypically recognized• Examples

– Male pattern baldness in humans (comes from your mother)

– Horns in sheep– Spotting in cattle

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Sex Linked Characteristics

• Genes carried on the sex chromosome • Example barred feather coloring in

chickens

Zb Zb

ZB ZB Zb ZB Zb

W Zb W Zb W

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Genetics Activities

• Chromosomes and Genes – Simulation Activity

• Dihybrid Guinea Pigs• Design a Species • Hardy-Weinburg?

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Genetics in Animals

• Using the terms learned today. • Find examples other than those used

in the presentation to help define 1 vocabulary word from today

• Vocab– Sex Linked - Codominance– Sex influenced - Sex limited

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Gene Behavior

Middletown High School Spring 2009

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Objectives

• Discuss common gene behavior

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Essential Question

• What types of gene behavior might appear as a phenotypic result

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Linkage

• Tendency for certain traits to appear in groups in the offspring

• Genes closer together on the chromosome are more likely to stay together

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Crossover

• During meiosis chromosomes line up closely

• Sometimes the genes jump and cross over forming new chromosomes with different combinations of genes

• The farther apart two genes are on a chromosome the more likely they are to make a new combination

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Mutation • New trait appears that

did not exist in parents • Some are harmful some

are beneficial • Radiation will cause

genes to mutate • Example: Polled

Herefords – Cross between to horned

resulted in polled– Polled is dominant – one

parent must be polled

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Mutation Activity: Library 10/14 11:30-12:30pm

• Research a mutation • Write a paragraph summary

describing the condition, what causes the condition, and if the condition benefits or harms the animal.

• Provide sources in APA format have at least 2

• This will be presented, and collected for grading. COMPLETE SENTENCES please

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Final Vocabulary

• Mutation• Crossover• Linkage• Sex linked• Sex influenced• Sex limited • Co-Dominance

• DTS• EPD• MBV• ACC• Hybrid Vigor• Punnett Square• Heritability • Monohybrid• Dihybrid

HeritabilityGregor MendelGeneChromosome GenotypePhenotypePedigreeGamete Cross BreedingSelective BreedingMitosisMeiosis