Chapter 11
Chapter 11
Inheritance
• 11.1 Monohybrid Inheritance
✓ Genetics is the scientific study of inheritance
✓ Study of how variation arises and how the characteristics of individuals are passed from one
*
pure-breeding
parents x
purple white
Gene Allele
CHARACTERISTIC TRAIT
• A heritable feature • Each variation of a specific
• Eg: height, colour characteristic
• Eg: tall or short
Characteristics Trait
Seed colour Yellow seed @
green seed
Height Tall @ short
Dominant Alleles
Dominant alleles : an allele which always shows its traits when it is
present, and suppresses the effect of recessive allele
● Represented by a capital letter
● Example : T for tall
Recessive Alleles
Recessive alleles : an allele which can shows its trait when both alleles
are recessive alleles
The effect of recessive allele is suppressed by the presence of dominant
allele
Represented by small letter
Example : t for short
Dominant Traits
Dominant traits : expressed when both alleles are dominant alleles,
or one dominant allele is paired with a recessive allele
Recessive Traits
Recessive traits : expressed if a recessive allele is paired with another
recessive allele
PHENOTYPE
● Phenotype : The observable characteristic of an organism
● Example : purple flower, tall stem, round seed, straight hair, free earlobe.
GENOTYPE
Genotype : of an organism which is cannot be seen the genetic
composition
Use small and capital letter as a symbol
Example : T T : tall plant
T t : tall plant
t t : short plant
Homozygote dominant
T T
Alleles
Homozygote recessive
Heterozygote
Pure-breeding
Heterozygote
Organism that have two different alleles for a gene and is said to be
heterozygous for that gene
Not pure-breeding because they produce gametes with different
alleles
Relationship between character, phenotype, allele,
genotype, homozygote and heterozygote
Trait / Type of
Character Allele Genotype
phenotype genotype
Tall stem
T
(dominant)
Height
Short stem
t
(recessive)
Yellow
Y
(dominant)
Seed colour
Green seed
y
(recessive)
Relationship between characteristic, phenotype,
allele, genotype, homozygote and heterozygote
Type of
Character Trait / phenotype Allele Genotype
genotype
Homozygote
TT
Tall stem dominant
T
(dominant) Heterozygote
Height Tt
Parent Genotypes TT tt
Meiosis
Parent Gametes T T t t
Random
fertilisation
Genotypes
First generation Tt Tt Tt Tt
(F1)
F1 Genotypes Tt X Tt
Meiosis
F1 Gametes T t T t
Random
fertilisation
F2 Genotypes TT Tt Tt tt
Phenotype of
Black fur Black fur
parents
Genotype of
parents Bb x Bb
(heterozygous)
Step 2 : Deduce from information given in the question the genotype and phenotype of both parents.
- The father is heterozygous = Aa
- The mother has attached earlobes which is homozygous recessive = aa
Step 3 : Draw genetic diagram to show the inheritance of the two traits in the offspring
11.2
• Dihybrid Inheritance •
• Dihybrid Cross
❑ Mendel worked out on second law of inheritance by crossing pea
plants to study the inheritance of two characteristics consisting of
two pairs of contrasting traits at the same time
❑ A cross which involves two pairs of alleles which determine two
characteristics is called dihybrid cross
DIHYBRID INHERITANCE
● The inheritance involve two characteristics in a cross – each
characteristic is controlled by different gene located at different locus.
● Example : X
Segregate Dihybrid
independently inheritance
Main
concept
recombination
Segregate Dihybrid
independently inheritance
Main
concept
DIHYBRID
INHERITANCE
F1 SELF
POLLINATION
11.3
Genes and Alleles
Unit of Inheritance and Location of Genes
1. Chromosomes are present in homologous pairs, where both members of each
homologous pair have the same structural features.
2. They are equal in length and have same patterns of genes
3. Gene is the basic unit of inheritance that is passed down from parents to
offspring
Unit of Inheritance and Location of Genes
1. Gene are arranged In a row along the chromosome , in a linear sequence
resembling a string of beads
2. Genes control the various trait or characteristics of an organism
3. The number of genes in each chromosomes is not fixed but dependent on the
size or length of the chromosome
Unit of Inheritance and Location of Genes
1. Each gene is a sequence of nucleotides at specific location or locus along a
particular chromosome
2. The nucleotide sequence may vary slightly giving rise to different versions of the
gene
3. Alleles are alternate form of the same gene that occur at the same relative loci
on a pair of homologous chromosomes
11.4
Inheritance in
Humans
CHROMOSOME
Female Male
• The X chromosome is larger than Y
chromosome
Most of genes on the X
chromosome do not have a
homologous counterpart on the Y
chromosome
As a result, X and Y chromosomes pair up during prophase of meiosis I and
genes
Abnormal Chromosomal
Numbers
• Occasionally, errors occur during meiosis when spindle fibres
distribute chromosomes to daughter cells
Non-disjunction is the failure of members of homologous
chromosomes to move apart properly during meiosis I or sister
chromatids to separate during meiosis II
• As a result, the gametes formed have
abnormal number of chromosomes
• One of the gametes may receive two
copies of the same type of chromosome
while another gamete receives no copy
at all
• Other chromosomes are usually
distributed normally
• Gametes produce would have 22 or 24
chromosomes instead of normal 23
chromosomes
Genetic disease related to Nondisjunction of chromosome
Disease Cause of disease Symptom
Down • An extra chromosome no. • Mentally retarded
Syndrome 21 (trisomy 21) • Flat facial features & small nose
• Total no. of chromosome: • Slanted eyes
47
Turner • Absent of one sex / X • Infertile/ non-functioning ovaries
Syndrome chromosome • Webbed neck
• No. of chromosome: • Kidney problem
44+X0
Klinefelter • An extra X chromosome • Developed breast
Syndrome • No. of chromosome: • Infertile
44+XXY • Sparse hair body
HUMAN INHERITANCE
1. Sex Determination
➢ Male : 44 + XY
➢ Female : 44 + XX
➢ Each sperm has either
22 + X OR 22 + Y
chromosomes
(haploid)
➢ Each secondary oocyte
has 22 +X (haploid)
➢ Gender of a child
determined during
fertilisation.
HUMAN INHERITANCE
2. ABO Blood Group
➢ Multiple alleles: IA, IB, IO
➢ Determine the type of antigen present on the surface of RBC
➢ Each person has two alleles
➢ Codominant : allele A and allele B–both show their effect–AB blood
group
Phenotype Genotypes Types of antigen Antibody in
(blood group) on red blood cell blood plasma
Colour-blindness
Colour-blindness
Genotype & phenotype
GENDER GENOTYPE PHENOTYPE
Male XCY Normal colour vision
(Homozygous dominant)
XcY Colour-blindness
(Homozygous recessive)
Female XC XC Normal colour vision
(Homozygous dominant)
XC Xc Carrier, normal colour vision
(Heterozygous)
Xc Xc Colour-blindness
(Homozygous recessive)
Schematic diagram : Inheritance of haemophilia
X
Parents
Parent phenotypes Normal eyesight X Normal eyesight
(carrier)
Parent genotypes XBY XBXb
Meiosis
Gametes XB Y XB Xb
Random fertilisation
● Is a condition in which the blood cannot clot normally due to the lack
of a protein needed for normal blood clotting
● The ability to produce the protein needed for blood clotting comes
from a dominant gene
● So, the individual who suffer from haemophilia has inability to
produce the protein needed for normal blood clotting is caused by a
recessive allele on the X chromosome
Genotype & phenotype
GENDER GENOTYPE PHENOTYPE
Male XHY Normal blood clotting
(Homozygous dominant)
XhY Haemophiliac
(Homozygous recessive
Female XH XH Normal blood clotting
(Homozygous dominant)
XH Xh Carrier, normal blood clotting
(Heterozygous)
Xh Xh Haemophiliac
(Homozygous recessive)
Schematic diagram : Inheritance of haemophilia
X
Parents
Parent phenotypes Normal blood X
Normal blood clotting
Parent genotypes clotting H (normal) XHXh
X Y
Meiosis
Gametes XH Y XH Xh
Random fertilisation