Heredity Notes
Heredity Notes
2. DNA is a chemical in the chromosome which carries the traits in a coded form.
4. Contrasting characters: A pair of visible charactes such as tall and dwarf, white and
violet flowers, round and wrinkled seeds, green and yellow seeds etc.
5. Dominant trait: The character which expresses itself in a (Ft) generation is dominant
trait. Example : Tallness is a dominant character in pea plant.
6. Recessive trait: The character which does not express itself but is present in a
generation is recessive trait. Ex. dwarfism in the pea plant.
7. Homozygous: A condition in which both the genes of same type are present for
example; an organism has both the genes for tallness it is expressed as TT and genes
for dwarfness are written as tt.
8. Heterozygous: A condition in which both the genes are of different types for example;
an organism has genes Tt it means it has a gene for tallness and the other for
dwarfness only tall character is expressed.
9. Genotype: It is genetic make up of an individual for example; A pure tall plant is
expressed as TT and hybrid tall as Tt.
10. Phenotype: It is external appearance of the organism for example; a plant having Tt
composition will appear tall although it has gene for dwarfness.
11. Homologous pair of characters are those in which one member is contributed by the
father and the other member by the mother and both have genes for the same character
at the same position.
Mendel’s Experiment: Mendel started his experiment on the pea plants. He conducted
first monohybrid and then dihybrid crosses.
Monohybrid Cross: The cross in which Mendel showed inheritance of dominant and
recessive characters is monohybrid cross. To observe inheritance of single pair of
contrasting characters
he took pure tall (genotype TT) and pure dwarf (genotype tt) pea plants and cross
pollinated them to obtain first generation or first filial generation. In this figuration (F1
generation) he obtained only tall plants. This meant that only one of the parental traits
was seen, not the mixture of the two. The plants of F generation or progeny are then self
pollinated to obtain F2 generation or progeny. Now all plants were not tall. He obtained
75% tall plants and 25% dwarf plants i.e. the phenotypic ratio was 3:1. This indicates
that in the F, generation both tall and dwarf traits were inherited but tallness expressed
it self. Tallness is a dominant trait and dwarfness is a recessive trait. F2 generation has
a genotypic ratio of 1 : 2 : 1 of three types of plants represented by TT, Tt and tt as
shown in the cross.
Law of Dominance: When parents having pure contrasting characters are crossed then
only one character expresses itself in the Ft generation. This character is the dominant
character and the character/factor which cannot express itself is called the recessive
character.
Dihybrid Cross: Mendel also carried out experiments to observe inheritance of two pairs
of contrasting characters, which is called dihybrid cross. He cross breed pea plants
bearing round green seed with plants bearing wrinkled and yellow seeds. In the Fx
generation he obtained all round and yellow seeds it means round and yellow traits of
seeds are dominant features while wrinkled and green are recessive. He self-pollinated
the plants of F: generation to obtain F2 generation, he obtained four different types of
seeds round yellow, round green, wrinkled yellow and wrinkled green in the ratio of 9 : 3 :
3 : 1. He concluded that traits are independently inherited
Conclusion
secreted the plant will grow tall. If the gene for that particular protein gets altered and
less of it is secreted when the plant will remain short. Both the parents contribute
equally to the DNA of next generation during sexual reproduction. They actually
contribute a copy of the same gene for example; when tall plant is crossed with short
plant the gametes will have single gene either for tallness or for shortness. F1
generation will get one gene for tallness and other for shortness also.
How do germ cells i.e. gametes get single set of genes from parents who have two
copies in them ?
Each gene set is present, not as a single long thread of DNA, but as separate
independent pieces each called a chromosome. Each cell gets two copies of the
chromosome, one from each parent. Each germ cell or gamete has one copy of it
because there is reductional division in the sex organs at the time of formation of
gametes. When fertilization takes place normal number of chromosomes is restored in
the progeny ensuring the stability of DNA of the species.
• In some animals the temperature at which fertilized eggs are kept determines
whether the developing animals will be males or females.
• Some animals like snails can change sex indicating that sex is not genetically
determined.
• In human beings sex of the individual is determined genetically; means genes
inherited from the parents decide the sex of the offspring.
Sex determination in human beings: In human beings, all chromosomes are not paired.
22 chromosomes are paired but one pair called sex chromosome is odd in not having a
perfect pair in males. Females have a perfect pair both represented by XX. On the other
hand males have a normal sized X but the other is short called Y so it is shown as XY.
All gametes or ova formed by the homogenetic female are similar i.e. have X
chromosome. Males heterogenetic form two types of sperms i.e. half with X
chromosome and the other half with Y chromosome. Sex of the baby will depend on
fertilization. There are two possibilities :
Autosomes: Those chromosomes which do not play any role in sex determination.
Sex chromosomes: Those chromosomes which play a role in determining sex of the
newborn.
• If the sperm having X chromosome fertilizes with ovum with X chromosome then
the baby will have XX chromosome and it will be female.
• If the sperm having Y chromosome fertilizes with ovum with X chromosome then
the baby will have XY chromosomes and it will be male.