Chapter 3 Heredity NAME _______________________ 1 Chapter 3 Vocabulary Gregor Mendel___________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Heredity________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Dominant trait____________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ Recessive trait____________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ Genes___________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ Alleles_________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________ Genotype______________________________________________________________ __________________________________________ Phenotype______________________________________________________________ __________________________________________ Probability______________________________________________________________ __________________________________________ Sex Cells__________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________ Sex Chromosomes___________________________________________________________ __________________________________________ 2 The father of genetics is _________________________. He lived from the year __________ to the year _____________. As a profession, he was a _________________ in the country _________________. He worked in the garden and studied _________ plants to show that the inheritance of traits follows particular laws. _______________________ – a characteristic of an organism ___________________ – the study of how traits are passed from parents to offspring Why Mendel used pea plants: 1. __________________________________________ 2. __________________________________________ 3. __________________________________________ 4. __________________________________________ __________________________________________– have offspring that always show the same form of the trait __________________________________________– a process in which one plant fertilizes the egg in a flower of a different plant __________________________ – tiny grains containing sperm; the male plant gamete Mendel’s experiments: _______ generation – parental generation _______ generation – offspring in first cross – hybrids __________________________ – the offspring of two different true breeding plants __________________________ – a cross between two plants that differ in only one trait _______ generation – the offspring that result when 2 hybrid plants are crossed Mendel’s P cross (Parental cross) involved a true breeder short and a true breeder long. Resulted in _______________________ Mendel’s F1 cross = F1 x F1 = ________% of the offspring were long and ______% were short. _____________________ – the factor that controls traits _________________ – the possibilities of a gene (e.g. A or a) __________________________ – one allele is dominant to a recessive allele __________________________ – the allele that masks any other allele in a heterozygous situation (A in Aa) (symbolized by the first letter in the dominant trait’s name, always capital) __________________________ – the allele that is masks by another allele in a heterozygous situation (a in Aa) (symbolized by the first letter in the dominant trait’s name, always lower case) __________________________ – having two identical alleles for a trait (AA or aa) (Mendel called this “true-breeding”) _________________________________ ___________________ – having two dominant alleles for a trait (AA) (Mendel called this “true breeding dominant”) __________________________ __________________________ – having two recessive alleles for a trait (aa) (Mendel called this “true breeding recessive”) __________________________ – having two different alleles for a trait (Aa) __________________________ - the visible traits of an organism (long or short) __________________________ - the alleles that an organism carries (AA, Aa, or aa) 3 __________________________ – a model used to represent crosses between organisms Steps to doing a Punnett Square: 1. identify the gametes of the parents 2. draw a square with 4 boxes 3. put the gametes from one parent on the top of the box and the gametes from the other parent on the side of the box 4. cross multiply to find the genotypes of the children 5. write the phenotypes of each child in the boxes 6. calculate genotypic and phenotypic ratios Try these Punnett Squares: 1. GG (homozygous green plant) x gg (homozygous recessive yellow plant) Phenotypic ratio: Green = _______% Yellow = _______% Genotypic ratio: GG = _______% Gg = _______% gg = _______% 2. Gg (heterozygous green plant) x gg (homozygous recessive yellow plant) Phenotypic ratio: Green = _______% Yellow = _______% Genotypic ratio: GG = _______% Gg = _______% 3. Gg (heterozygous green plant) x Gg (heterozygous green plant) Phenotypic ratio: Green = _______% Yellow = _______% Genotypic ratio: GG = _______% Gg = _______% 4 Practice Punnett Squares NAME ______________________________________________________________ 1. Widow’s peak is a dominant trait in humans. If a parent does not have a widow’s peak, what are the genes that the parent has? 2. If a parent does have a widow’s peak, what are the genes that the parent might have? 3. Long eyelashes are dominant in humans. What are the genes for a person who is a hybrid for long eyelashes? 4. The ability to roll your tongue is a dominant human trait. What are the genes for a person who is a pure dominant person? 5. Draw a Punnett square for a cross between a person who is WW and a person who is Ww for widow’s peak. 6. Draw a Punnett square for a cross between two people who are both Rr for the ability to roll their tongues. 7. In the Punnett square you drew in number 6, were the parents able to roll their tongues? 8. In the Punnett square you drew in number 6, how many of the 4 children were able to roll their tongues? 9. In the Punnett square you drew in number 6, how many of the 4 children has the same genes as their parents? 10. In the Punnett square you drew in number 6, how many of the 4 children are pure recessive? 5 1. Pink hair is dominant over blue hair in smurfs. Cross a homozygous dominant hair smurf with a homozygous recessive hair smurf. 2. Orange skin is dominant over blue skin in oranges. Cross a heterozygous skin orange with a homozygous dominant skin orange. 3. Black hair is dominant over red hair in Labrador retrievers. Cross a homozygous dominant hair retriever with a heterozygous hair retriever. 4. Green pods are dominant over yellow pods in string beans. Cross 2 heterozygous pod string beans. 5. Curly hair is dominant over straight hair in poodles. Cross a purebred dominant with a true breed recessive poodle. 6 Punnett Square Practice NAME __________________________________ CLASS ___ DATE _______ Please circle your final answer. 1. A pea plant which is heterozygous for long (Long is dominant, short is recessive) is crossed with a pea plant which is homozygous recessive. What are the genotypic and phenotypic ratios of the offspring? 2. A person who is heterozygous for widow’s peak (Widow’s peak is dominant, no peak is recessive) has children with another heterozygote. What are the genotypic and phenotypic ratios of the offspring? 3. A guinea pig which is homozygous dominant (black is dominant, white is recessive) is crossed with another guinea pig which is heterozygous. What are the genotypic and phenotypic ratios of the offspring? 4. A person who does not have the ability to roll his tongue (rolling is dominant, not rolling is recessive) has children with a person who is heterozygous for tongue rolling. What are the genotypic and phenotypic ratios of the offspring? (Hint: if you can’t roll your tongue, and rolling is dominant, what must the genotype of a non-roller be?) 7 5. Two organisms, which are heterozygous for long eyelashes, have children. (Having long eyelashes is dominant, short eyelashes is recessive). What are the genotypic and phenotypic ratio of the offspring? 6. Two pea plants are crossed. One is homozygous recessive for long (Long is dominant and short is recessive) and the other is heterozygous. If 100 pea plant offspring are produced, how many of them will be long? 7. A person without freckles (Freckles is dominant, no freckles is recessive) has children with a person who is homozygous dominant for freckles. How many of their children will have freckles if they have 4 children? 8. In pea plants, green pods are dominant over yellow. If yellow plant (known to be homozygous recessive) is crossed with a green plant (could be homozygous dominant or could be heterozygous), and the offspring are all green, what was the genotype of the green parent? 8 9. A person with a widow’s peak could be homozygous dominant or could be heterozygous. If that person is crossed with a person without a widow’s peak, and 50% of their children do not have widow’s peaks, what was the genotype of the parent with the widow’s peak? 10. Non-red hair is dominant over red hair. A person with red hair is crossed with a person with non-red hair. All of the offspring have non-red hair. What was the genotype of the non-red haired parent? 11. If a pea plant which is heterozygous long is crossed with another heterozygous long pea plant, and they produce 200 offspring, how many of those offspring will be short? 12. Make up your own word problem involving free and attached ear lobes (free ear lobes are dominant over attached). Solve the word problem. 9 SpongeBob Genetics Quiz Name ____________________________ 1. For each genotype below, indicate whether it is a heterozygous (He) OR homozygous (Ho). TT _____ Pp _____ dd _____ Ff _____ Tt _____ FF _____ Which of the genotypes listed above would be considered purebred? _____________________ 2. In Squidward’s family, a blue body color (B) is dominant to green (b). Determine the phenotype for each genotype below based on this information. BB _________________ Bb _________________ bb _________________ 3. If tall eyeballs (T) are dominant to short eyeballs(t), give the genotypes that are possible for members of Mr. Krabbs’ family. Tall eyeballs = ___________________ Short eyeballs = ______________________ 4. SpongeBob is known for his big round eyes (R), which is dominant over an oval eye shape (r). If he is heterozygous for his round eye shape and marries a woman with oval eye shape, what type of eyes might the kids have? A. List the genotypes for each: Heterozygous round eyes - _______ Oval eyes - _______ B. Complete the Punnett square to show the possibilities that would result if SpongeBob had children with an oval-eyed woman. C. List the possible genotypes and phenotypes for their children. D. What are the chances of a child with a round eye shape? ____% E. What are the chances of a child with an oval eye shape? ____% 5. Patrick recently married Patti, a cute girl he met at a local dance. He is considered a purebred for his tall head shape (T), which is dominant over a short head (t). If Patti is a short-headed woman, what type of heads would their children have? A. List the genotypes for each: Patrick - ______ Patti - _______ B. Complete the Punnett square to show the possible offspring. C. Which type of head is most likely: tall or short? Explain. D. Would the children be considered purebreds? Explain. 10 Worksheet created by T. Trimpe 2003 http://sciencespot.net/ Design a Dragon Name__________________________________________ In this lab you and a partner will flip a penny 10 times each and record the number of the heads and tails combinations for each flip. A “heads” flip represents a dominant allele (H) and a “tails” flip represents a recessive allele (h). When you are done, look at the Trait Key telling you which traits are dominant and recessive for dragons. Then, you will draw a dragon according to the alleles that you flipped for. For example, if a red body color is dominant and you flip a heads and your partner flips tails, you will color your dragon red because the genotype would be Hh. You will still color it red if your partner flips a heads, because red body color is dominant making an HH genotype. If a green body color is recessive, you AND your partner will have to flip tails to have your dragon express the green body color trait to make the genotype hh. Make sure to hand in your flip chart and the picture of your genetically designed dragon. Flip Trial # Genotype (HH, Hh, hh) Example: 1 I flipped heads (H) and my partner flipped tails (h) so the genotype would be Hh 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 10 Trait Key: Trait # Dominant Recessive 1. Body Color Red Green 2. Body Spots Colored Body Spots NO Body Spots 3. Fire Breather Breathes Fire Does not Breathe Fire 4. Tail Spikes No Tail Spikes Present Spikes Present on Tail 12 5. Teeth Pointy Teeth Square Teeth 6. Ear Shape Round Ears Pointy Ears 7. Claw Length Short Claws Long Claws 8. Tongue Length Long Short 9. Wing Color Black Blue 10. Stomach Color Yellow Orange Name ______________________________________________________________ Punnett Squares – Crosses Involving One Trait In a certain species of animal, black fur (B) is dominant over brown fur (b). Using the following Punnett square, predict the genotypes and phenotypes of the offspring whose parents are both Bb or have heterozygous black fur. Genotypes: B b _____% homozygous black fur (BB) _____% heterozygous black fur (Bb) B b _____% homozygous brown fur (bb) Phenotypes: _____% black fur _____% brown fur Now do the same when one parent is homozygous black ()BB) and the other is homozygous brown (bb). Genotypes: _____% homozygous black fur (BB) 13 Repeat this process again when one parent is heterozygous (Bb) black and the other is homozygous brown (bb). Genotypes: _____% homozygous black fur (BB) _____% heterozygous black fur (Bb) _____% homozygous brown fur (bb) Phenotypes: _____% black fur Section 3-1 _____% brown fur Review and Reinforce Mendel’s Work Understanding Main Ideas Study the figure. Then answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper. P generation F1 Generation F1 Generation F2 Generation 1. What trait in pea plants is being studied in the cross above? 2. What are the two alleles of this trait? 3. Which allele is the dominant allele? Explain how you know. 14 4. Which allele is the recessive allele? Explain. 5. What alleles do the F1 offspring have? Explain which allele was inherited from which parent. Building Vocabulary Match each term with its definition by writing the letter of the correct definition on the line beside the term. _____ 6. Genetics a. the passing of traits from parents to offspring _____ 7. Alleles b. an organism with two different alleles for a trait _____ 8. Traits c. factors that control traits _____ 9. Recessive allele d. physical characteristics of organisms _____10. Genes e. an allele whose trait always shows up in the organism _____11. Hybrid f. the different forms of a gene _____12. Heredity g. the scientific study of heredity _____13. Dominant allele h. an allele whose trait is masked in the presence of a dominant allele Incomplete Dominance Punnett Squares Unlike simple Mendelian dominance and recessiveness, SOME traits are inherited by INCOMPLETE dominance. In some flowers, red (RR), white (WW), and pink (RW) colors can exist. RED and WHITE are incompletely dominant. In some animals, fur can be black (BB), white (WW), or gray (BW). Try these: pink flowers X white flowers Black fur x white fur Gray fur x gray fur Multiple Alleles Punnett Squares Some people have proteins on the outside of their blood cells, while other people do not. Blood type Proteins on blood cells: A A B B AB A and B O none Genotype AA AO Phenotype A A 15 Blood type is inherited by multiple alleles. A and B are co-dominant, which means that they are equally dominant if they are both found in the same person. There is one recessive allele, O. A person can have any two of those three alleles. Genotypes and phenotypes are summarized in the table: Try these: blood type AO X blood type BO BO BB AB OO blood type AA X blood type BO B B B O blood type BB X blood type AO 1. Fur color in huskies in INCOMPLETELY DOMINANT. Cross a brown with a white husky. B=brown W= white What % of the offspring are white?_____brown?_________tan?___________ 2. Cross 2 tan huskies 16 What percent % of the of the offspring are brown?____________white_________tan___________ 3. HARRY AND HARRIET GOT MARRIED. HARRY HAS BLOOD TYPE O AND HARRIET HAS BLOOD TYPE AB. THEIR BABY HAS BLOOD TYPE 0 AND IT DOES NOT LOOK LIKE EITHER ONE OF THEM. IS LITTLE MARVIN THEIRS? Use a punnet square to prove your answer Hospital Mix-up! The local hospital has reported a power outage. Unfortunately, three babies were born during this power outage and they got mixed up! See if you can determine which baby belongs to which set of parents based on their blood type. The three babies that were born are: Baby 1 – Blood type O Baby 2 – Blood type A Baby 3 – Blood type AB 17 Mother’s blood type A Father’s blood type O Lucy and Ricky Ricardo B A George and Jane Jetson O B Couple Fred and Wilma Flintstone Which Baby? 1 Droopy is dominant over perky for ears in cocker spaniels. Cross a homozygous droopy eared cocker spaniel with a homozygous perky eared cocker spaniel Dominant _____________________Recessive ____________________ What are the parent’s genotype?_____________________________ What are the phenotype(s) of the offspring? _____________________ 2 Egg shaped is dominant over round shaped in flower petals Cross a heterozygous shaped flower petal with a homozygous recessive flower petal Dominant ____________________ Recessive _____________________ What are the parent’s genotype? ___________________________ What are the phenotypes of the offspring? ___________________________________________________ 18 3 Hiccups are dominant over non hiccups in Persian cats Cross a homozygous dominant hiccupping cat with a homozygous recessive gene for hiccups Dominant ________________________Recessive ____________________ What are the parent’s genotype? _______________________ What are the phenotypes (s) of the offspring? __________________________ What is the phenotype ratio?___________________________________ 4 Freckles are dominant over non-freckles in redheads Cross 2 heterozygous freckled redheads Dominant ____________________Recessive ____________________ What are the parent’s genotype ____________________________ What are the phenotypes of the offspring ? ________________________ What is the genotype ratio?_________________________________ What is the phenotype ratio?_______________________________ What percentage of the offspring are homozygous recessive? _____________ 5 Tilted is dominant over straight in the trunks of dogwood trees Cross a homozygous recessive trunk with a heterozygous trunk Dominant_____________________Recessive _________________ 19 What are the parent’s genotype? ________________________ What are the phenotypes of the offsping ? ____________________________ What is the percentage of the offspring that are homozygous dominant? _______ What Color Is the Pod? Green (g) is the dominant color for pods of pea plants. Yellow (g) is recessive. 1. What are the phenotypes of the following genotypes: a. GG ________________________________________________________________ b. Gg ________________________________________________________________ c. Gg ________________________________________________________________ 2. Fill in the Punnett squares below to show the outcomes of the crosses. Next to each genotype, write the correct phenotype. a. GG x Gg b. GG x gg 20 c. Gg x Gg d. Gg x gg