5 Steps to a 5 AP Biology, 2014-2015 Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

100 ❯ STEP 4. Review the Knowledge You Need to Score High


Mendel and His Peas


The person whose name is most often associated with heredity is Gregor Mendel. Mendel
spent many years working with peas. It was a very strange hobby, indeed, but it proved
quite useful to the world of science. He mated peas to produce offspring and recorded the
phenotype results in order to determine how certain characters are inherited. A character
is a genetically inherited characteristic that differs from person to person.
Before he began his work in the 1850s, the accepted theory of inheritance was the
“blending” hypothesis,which stated that the genes contributed by two parents mix as
colors do. For example, a blue flower mixed with a yellow flower would produce a green
flower. The exact genetic makeup of each parent could never be recovered; the genes would
be as inseparable as the blended colors. Mendel used plant experiments to test this hypoth-
esis and developed his two fundamental theories: the law of segregation and the law of inde-
pendent assortment.
When Mendel was observing a single character during a mating, he was doing something
called a monohybrid cross—a cross that involves a single character in which both parents are
heterozygous (Bb ×Bb). A monohybrid cross between heterozygous gametes gives a 3:1
phenotype ratio in the offspring (Figure 10.1). As you can see in Figure 10.1, an offspring
is three times more likely to express the dominant B trait than the recessive b trait.

B

B BB

b Bb

b
Bb
bb

Figure 10.1 Monohybrid cross.

Figure 10.2 Dihybrid cross.

BR Br bR br
BR BBRR BBRr BbRr
Bbrr
bbRr
bbrr

BbRR
Br BBRr BBrr BbRr
bbRR
bbRr

bR BbRR BbRr
br BbRr Bbrr

Mendel also experimented with multiple characters simultaneously. The crossing of
two different hybrid characters is termed a dihybrid cross(BbRr×BbRr). A dihybrid
cross between heterozygous gametes gives a 9:3:3:1 phenotype ratio in the offspring
(Figure 10.2).

From his experiments, Mendel developed two major hereditary laws: the law of segregation
and the law of independent assortment.
The law of segregation.Every organism carries pairs of factors, called alleles,for each trait,
and the members of the pair segregate (separate) during the formation of gametes. For
example, if an individual is Bb for eye color, during gamete formation, one gamete would
receive a B, and the other made from that cell would receive a b.
The law of independent assortment.Members of each pair of factors are distributed indepen-
dently when the gametes are formed. Quite simply, inheritance of one trait or characteristic
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