Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

122 ■ CHAPTER 07 Patterns of Inheritance


GENETICSGENETICS


shows all possible ways that two alleles can be
brought together through fertilization. To create
a Punnett square showing how a trait is inher-
ited, list the alleles of the male genotype across
the top of the grid, writing each unique allele
just once. List the alleles of the female genotype
along the left edge of the grid, again writing each
unique allele only once. In the case of Mendel’s
cross of the F 1 generation, the male genotype
(Pp) is mated with the female genotype (also Pp).
Next, fill in each box (or “cell”) in the grid
by combining the male allele at the top of each
column with the female allele listed at the begin-
ning of each row. The Punnett square shows all
four ways in which the two alleles in the sperm
can combine with the two alleles found in the
eggs. The four genotypes shown within the
Punnett square are all equally likely outcomes
of this cross.
Using the Punnett square method, we can
predict that ¼ of the F 2 generation is likely to
have genotype PP, ½ to have genotype Pp, and
¼ to have genotype pp. Because the allele for
purple flowers (P) is dominant, plants with
PP or Pp genotypes have purple flowers, while
plants with pp genotypes have white flowers.
Therefore, we predict that ¾ (75 percent) of the
F 2 generation will have purple flowers and ¼ (25
percent) will have white flowers—a 3:1 (¾:¼)
ratio of phenotypes. This prediction is very close
to the actual results that Mendel obtained. Of a
total 929 F 2 plants that Mendel raised, 705 (76
percent) had purple flowers and 224 (24 percent)
had white flowers.
Results like these supported Mendel’s first
law, the law of segregation, which, in modern
terms (Mendel did not know about DNA),
states that the two alleles of a gene are sepa-
rated during meiosis, the specialized type of
cell division during sexual reproduction that
was discussed in Chapter 6, and end up in
different gametes—egg or sperm cells. One
of the two alleles is found on one of the chro-
mosomes in a homologous pair, and the other
allele is found on the other chromosome in the
pair (see Figure 7.2). Remember, homologous
chromosome pairs are partitioned into separate
daughter cells during meiosis I. Mendel’s law of
segregation can be used to predict how a single
trait will be inherited.
You can try this on your own by making a
Punnett square to predict the ratio of black

The F 1 offspring of
PP × pp plants all
have genotype Pp.

Egg and sperm can
combine in four
possible ways in
the F 2 generation.

The Punnett square
method predicts 3
purple-flowered
offspring for every
1 white-flowered
offspring, a 3:1 ratio.

Each egg and each
sperm produced by
the F 1 plants has a
50% chance of
receiving a P allele
and a 50% chance
of receiving a
p allele.

×

Gametes

Sperm

Eggs

Pp

PP Pp

Pp pp

P p P

P

p

p

P p

Pp

Punnett square

F 1 generation

F 2 generation

Figure 7.5


Punnett squares predict the offspring of genetic crosses


Q1: Why did Mendel’s entire F 1 generation look the same?

Q2: The phenotype ratio in the F 2 generation is 3:1 purple-to-white
flowers. What is the genotype ratio?

Q3: Draw a Punnett square for a genetic cross of two heterozygous,
black-coated dogs. What are the phenotype and genotype ratios of
their offspring?

in which one parent bred true for purple flowers
(PP) and the other bred true for white flowers
(pp). The first generation of offspring of a genetic
cross is called the F 1 generation (“F” is for “filial,”
a word that refers to a son or daughter). When
the individuals of the F 1 generation are crossed
with each other, the resulting offspring are said
to belong to the F 2 generation. Mendel allowed
the F 1 -generation pea plants to self-fertilize to
produce the F 2 generation.
We can predict the results of an experimen-
tal cross by using a grid-like diagram called a
Punnett square (Figure 7.5). A Punnett square
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