Principles of Inheritance and Variation
Principles of Inheritance and Variation
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Introduction
● James Dewey Watson (born April 6, 1928) received a B.Sc. in Zoology in 1947 and a
Ph.D. in Zoology in 1950 for studying the effect of hard X-rays on bacteriophage
multiplication.
● His interest shifted from bird-watching to genetics.
● He met Crick, and they shared an interest in solving the structure of DNA.
● Their first attempt was unsuccessful.
● Their second effort, based on more experimental evidence and nucleic acid literature,
resulted in the proposal of the complementary double-helical configuration in early March
1953.
● Francis Harry Compton Crick (born June 8, 1916) obtained a B.Sc. in physics in 1937
and a Ph.D. in 1954 on X-ray Diffraction of Polypeptides and Proteins.
● His friendship with the younger Watson was a critical influence, leading to the 1953 DNA
structure proposal and replication scheme.
● Crick was made an F.R.S. in 1959.
● Honours to Watson and Crick include the John Collins Warren Prize (1959), Lasker
Award (1960), Research Corporation Prize (1962), and the Nobel Prize (1962).
● Genetics is the branch of biology dealing with inheritance and variation of characters
from parents to offspring.
● Inheritance is the process of passing characters from parent to progeny and is the basis
of heredity.
● Variation is the degree by which progeny differ from their parents.
● Humans have known since 8000-1000 B.C. that sexual reproduction causes variation
and used selective breeding for desirable traits.
● Artificial selection and domestication, e.g., Sahiwal cows from wild cows, demonstrate
the application of this knowledge.
● However, ancestors had little scientific understanding of the basis of inheritance and
variation.
● Gregor Mendel conducted hybridization experiments on garden peas for seven years
(1856-1863).
● He proposed the laws of inheritance in living organisms.
● Mendel was the first to apply statistical analysis and mathematical logic to biological
problems.
● His experiments had a large sample size, increasing the credibility of his data.
● Confirmation of his inferences in successive generations supported the generality of his
rules.
● Mendel studied characters with two opposing traits (e.g., tall/dwarf, yellow/green seeds).
● This allowed him to establish a basic framework of inheritance rules, later expanded by
others.
● Mendel used artificial pollination/cross-pollination with true-breeding pea lines.
● A true-breeding line shows stable trait inheritance and expression after continuous
self-pollination.
● Mendel selected 14 true-breeding pea plant varieties with contrasting traits (e.g.,
smooth/wrinkled seeds, yellow/green seeds, inflated/constricted pods, tall/dwarf plants).
● Mendel crossed tall and dwarf pea plants to study the inheritance of one gene
(monohybrid cross).
● The first hybrid generation (F₁) progeny were all tall, resembling one parent.
● The dwarf trait did not appear in the F₁ generation.
● Self-pollination of the tall F₁ plants resulted in some dwarf offspring (1/4th) in the Filial 2
(F₂) generation, with 3/4th being tall.
● The tall and dwarf traits in the F₂ were identical to the parental types, showing no
blending.
● Similar 3:1 ratios in F₂ were observed for other traits, with no blending in F₁ or F₂.
● Mendel proposed that 'factors' (now called genes) were stably passed down unchanged
through gametes.
● Genes are the units of inheritance and contain information for expressing a trait.
● Genes coding for contrasting traits are alleles (slightly different forms of the same gene).
● Alphabetical symbols are used for genes, with capital letters for dominant traits
(expressed in F₁) and lowercase for recessive traits.
● For height, T (tall) and t (dwarf) are alleles.
● Homozygous individuals have identical alleles (TT or tt), while heterozygous individuals
have dissimilar alleles (Tt).
● TT and tt represent the genotype, while tall and dwarf are the phenotype.
● The phenotype of the heterozygous Tt plant was tall, leading to the concept of
dominance.
● In a pair of dissimilar factors, one (dominant) masks the expression of the other
(recessive).
● T (tall) is dominant over t (dwarf).
● It's important to use consistent symbols (e.g., T and t, not T and d) to avoid confusion
about allelic relationships.
● Since the Tt plant is heterozygous for one character, the TT x tt cross is a monohybrid
cross.
● The reappearance of the recessive trait in F₂ without blending suggests that alleles
segregate during gamete formation (meiosis), with each gamete receiving only one
allele.
● Segregation of alleles is random, with a 50% chance for each allele in a gamete.
● Tall (TT) plants produce gametes with allele T, and dwarf (tt) plants produce gametes
with allele t.
● Fertilization unites one allele from each parent (e.g., T from pollen, t from egg), resulting
in heterozygous (Tt) zygotes.
● A Punnett Square, developed by Reginald C. Punnett, is a graphical representation to
calculate the probability of offspring genotypes in a genetic cross.
● It shows parental gametes on two sides and possible combinations in the squares.
● Self-pollination of F₁ (Tt) plants produces gametes T and t in equal proportion.
● Random fertilization leads to TT (1/4), Tt (1/2), and tt (1/4) genotypes in the F₂
generation.
● The phenotypic ratio in F₂ is 3/4 tall (TT and Tt) : 1/4 dwarf (tt), a 3:1 ratio.
● The genotypic ratio in F₂ is 1:2:1 (TT: Tt: tt).
● The genotypic ratio can be represented by the binomial expression (1/2T + 1/2t)² = 1/4
TT + 1/2Tt + 1/4 tt.
● Self-pollination of dwarf F₂ plants (tt) continued to produce only dwarf plants in
subsequent generations, indicating their homozygous genotype.
● The genotype of a tall plant (TT or Tt) cannot be determined solely by its phenotype.
● A test cross involves crossing an organism with a dominant phenotype (unknown
genotype) with a recessive parent to determine the genotype of the dominant phenotype
organism.
● The progeny of a test cross can reveal the genotype of the tested organism.
● This law is based on the fact that alleles do not blend and both parental characters are
recovered in F₂, even if one wasn't seen in F₁.
● During gamete formation, the two alleles of a pair segregate, so each gamete receives
only one allele.
● A homozygous parent produces similar gametes, while a heterozygous parent produces
two types of gametes with equal proportions of each allele.
4.2.2.2 Co-dominance
● Mendel also studied dihybrid crosses, involving pea plants differing in two characters
(e.g., seed color and shape).
● Cross between yellow round (RRYY) and green wrinkled (rryy) seeds produced F₁ with
yellow and round seeds (RrYy).
● Yellow color (Y) is dominant over green (y), and round shape (R) is dominant over
wrinkled (r).
● These dominance relationships were consistent with monohybrid crosses.
● Self-hybridization of F₁ (RrYy) resulted in F₂ with a 3:1 ratio for yellow:green and 3:1 for
round:wrinkled, similar to monohybrid crosses.
● The F₂ phenotypic ratio in the dihybrid cross was 9 round yellow : 3 wrinkled yellow : 3
round green : 1 wrinkled green.
● This 9:3:3:1 ratio is a combination of the 3:1 ratios of the individual monohybrid crosses:
(3 Round : 1 Wrinkled) x (3 Yellow : 1 Green).
● Based on dihybrid crosses, Mendel proposed the Law of Independent Assortment.
● Law of Independent Assortment: When two pairs of traits are combined in a
hybrid, segregation of one pair of characters is independent of the other pair of
characters.
● The Punnett square can illustrate the independent segregation of two gene pairs during
meiosis and the production of gametes by the F₁ (RrYy) plant.
● Segregation of R and r (50% R, 50% r) is independent of the segregation of Y and y
(50% Y, 50% y).
● This results in four types of gametes: RY, Ry, rY, and ry, each with a frequency of 25%
(1/4th).
● The Punnett square for a dihybrid cross has 16 squares representing the possible
zygote genotypes in F₂.
● The F₂ genotypic ratio is not simply 9:3:3:1 and needs to be worked out from the Punnett
square.
4.5 Pleiotropy
4.7 Mutation
Summary
Exercises
● The exercises at the end list questions related to the concepts covered in the chapter.