Allelic forms of a gene
Pattern of inheritance involving two genes controlling two different phenotypes
Obeys Mendel's second law (Principle of Independent Assortment)
Basic terminology
Homozygous - when both alleles at a given diploid locus are the same - eg. AA or aa
Heterozygous - when there is one dominant and one recessive allele present at a diploid locus eg. Aa
Homozygote - an individual who is homozygous at the locus in question
Heterozygote - an individual who is heterozygous at the locus in question
Hybrid - derived from two genetically different parents
Monohybrid - a hybrid or heterozygous for one gene
Dihybrid - a hybrid or heterozygous for two different genes
True breeding - homozygous at the loci/locus in question
Principle of segregation
Rules from monohybrid crosses - results in a 1:2:1 ratio of genotypes in the F2
Result in a 3:1 (dominant:recessive) ratio of phenotypes in the F2
Dihybrid cross
Cross involving 2 genes controlling 2 different traits
Some offspring having recombinant phenotypes not seen in the parental generation
This is because of ROB - each bivalent can orientate independently in the metaphase 1 plate
Mendel worked on genes on separate chromosomes
If they were linked on the chromosomes they could only be segregated by crossing over
During gamete formation different genes segregate independently from each other when on different chromosomes
Can use punnett squares to determine possible genotypes and phenotypes and their ratios
Crosses that obey the 9:3:3:1 ratio are obeying Mendel's Principle of Independent Assortment
Branched line diagrams
More practical than punnett squares ‘
Good if you want all the genotypes or phenotypes and their probabilities
Example: phenotypes in the F2 resulting from a dihybrid cross between yellow round and green wrinkled peas
Dihybrid genotypic ratios
Number of genotype classes = 3n
Where n = number of genes each with 2 alleles
For dihybrid cross - the 16 genotypes can be ordered into 9 classes based on no. of dom homozygous; recessive homozygotes and heterozygotes
Polygenic inheritance
Complementation and the identification of genes controlling the same phenotype in diploids
Interactions between genes controlling the same phenotype - epistasis
Identification of more than one gene involved in controlling the same phenotypic trait:
Use mutational analysis to identify genes involved in controlling the same trait
Generate and identify sets of mutants
Complementation analysis is a key approach for deciding this
Diploid complementation
Two genes may have different functions in the generation of the same phenotype
Eg. a molecular product, made by 2 enzymes in a biochemical pathway
Presence of one wild type allele for both genes complements each other to give a wild type phenotype ie:
Eg. complementation between two genes (e and b) in Drosophila body colour
Eg. complementation between two genes involved in eye colour in Drosophila
Large number of mutations alter the normal red eye colour
How would you determine whether the mutation in each strain is dominant or recessive?
Cross each mutation to the wild type, red strain and observe the phenotypes of the progeny
A dominant mutation is one that appears in a heterozygote
If the progeny shows red eyes - mutation is recessive
The the progeny shows brown eyes - the mutation is dominant
How would you determine how many different genes are affected in the six mutant strains?
Set up pairs of crosses between the mutants to perform complementation tests:
Mutations in the same gene will produce brown-eyed (mutant) progeny and belong to the same complementation group
Mutations in different genes will produce red eyed progeny and will belong to different complementation groups
Counting the number of different complementation groups will give the number of genes affected
How would you determine which mutants, if any, are allelic?
Allelic mutations are those that are members if the same complementation group
How would you determine whether any of these mutants are alleles of genes already known to affect eye colour?
Cross each mutant to known mutants of eye colour genes and test for complementation