1 / 22

Warm Up (discussion only)

Warm Up (discussion only). Which parent determines the biological sex of the baby? + why is that? Candace has type B blood. Her husband Dan has type AB blood. Is it possible for Candace and Dan to have a child that has O blood? Explain why or why not (Hint: Punnett square!).

Télécharger la présentation

Warm Up (discussion only)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Warm Up (discussion only) • Which parent determines the biological sex of the baby? + why is that? • Candace has type B blood. Her husband Dan has type AB blood. Is it possible for Candace and Dan to have a child that has O blood? Explain why or why not (Hint: Punnett square!)

  2. Sex-linked Traits7R

  3. Let’s talk about sex! (kinda) • Recall: Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes • Autosomes: the chromosomes that don’t determine sex (22 homologous pairs) • Sex Chromosomes: the chromosomes that determine the sex of an individual (1 pair) • Male: XY • Female: XX

  4. What determines sex? • What kinds of gametes do males make? • What kinds of gametes do females make?

  5. Sex-linked Inheritance • Sex chromosomes don’t just determine the sex of an individual, they also have other genes on them as well • Sex-linked traits: traits controlled by genes located on sex chromosomes

  6. Sex-linked Inheritance • The two different alleles of the gene are represented as… • Superscripts of the X and Y symbols • Ex. XR or Xr (for a gene on the X chromosome) • Ex. YR or Yr (for a gene on the Y chromosome)

  7. Sex-linked Inheritance • Remember!!: The X and Y chromosomes are NOT homologous!! • They don’t have the same genes on them • So if we are talking about a gene on the X chromosome (XR), the Y chromosome won’t have this gene so we leave the Y blank (Y) • Any recessive allele on the X chromosome in a male will NOT be masked by a chromosome on the Y • You will see the recessive phenotype!! ***

  8. Let’s Stop and Think… • If the gene for eye color is on the X chromosome and the dominant allele is red (R) & recessive is white (r), what would be the eye color phenotype of these individuals? • XRXR - ? • XRY - ? • XRXr - ? • XrY -?

  9. Check it out

  10. Human example 1 • Hemophilia = problem with blood-clotting proteins (ruh-roh!) • Mostly affects males • WHY?!?! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2xufrHWG3E- start at 2:24

  11. Human example 2 • Even if neither parent expresses the recessive “disease” phenotype, a child (probably a male) might • IF 1 parent (usually the mom!) is a CARRIER • Ex: Red-green colorblindness

  12. Just for funsies

  13. Let’s Stop and Think… (top half of 7L) • In fruit flies, eye color is on the X chromosome. R = red, r = white • If a heterozygous red-eyed female is crossed with a red-eyed male, what would the phenotypes of the offspring be? • 1st, figure out the genotypes of the parents • Female: XRXr Male: XRY • 2nd, figure out the gametes of the parents • Female: XR and Xr Male: XR and Y

  14. Let’s Stop and Think… (top half of 7L) • 3rd, create a Punnett Square: XR Xr XR XRXR XRXr XrY Y XRY

  15. Let’s Stop and Think… (top half of 7L) • 4th, determine the phenotypes • Females: 100% red-eyed • Males: 50% red-eyed; 50% white-eyed XR Y 75% of the offspring will have red eyes; 25% white XRY XR XRXR XRXr XrY Xr

  16. Calico Cat Challenge (bottom half of 7L) • Background: Calico is a coat color found in cats, caused by a Sex-Linked, Codominant allele. B=black, R=orange, B R=calico. ONLY females can be calico. • Challenge: Determine which combination of cat parents will probably create the most number of calico kittens.○ Good luck! Hint: first determine the possible genotypes!! There should be 5 ;)

  17. BIG PICTURE PRACTICE • On each of the following slides, you’ll see a picture, a punnett square, or a scenario described. • You need to determine what pattern of inheritance is being shown & WHY: • Simple • Incomplete Dominance • Codominance • Polygenetic • Sex-linked

  18. Pattern of inheritance + why?

  19. Pattern of inheritance + why?

  20. Pattern of inheritance + why?

  21. Pattern of inheritance + why?

  22. Pattern of inheritance + why?

More Related