Friday 19 September 2014

THE LAWS OF INHERTANCE



      The study of science of genetics begins with the work of Gregor Mendel. He was a clergyman and a teacher. He performed his own experiment on garden pea. He restricted his attention to the single character and kept pedigree records for each plant. Mendel studied the nature of inheritance in plants and presented his work in 1885 in the paper “Experiments on Plant Hybridisation “. The importance of his work did not get noticed until 1890s, after his death. The advantages of garden pea (Pisum sativum) as experimental system were:

The characters were readily observable.
Plants were easy to grow and self fertilise before the flowers opened
Mendel worked with 14 pure breeding varieties and selected seven pairs of characters and propounded the following laws:
The law of dominance: Mendel stated that the hereditary characters are determined by pair of factors (genes) in an individual. In a monohy--brid cross all the plants in F₁ generation showed only one character   but in F₂ the other character appears. The character in F₁ generation is dominant and the one which expresses in F₂ generation is recessive e.g., the cross between two homozygous parents (P), one with two dominant alleles for tall plant (TT) and the other with two recessive alleles for dwarf plant (tt). The phenotype of the offspring in F₂ generation is dominant and the one which expresses in F₂ generation is recessive e.g., the cross between two homozygous parents (P), one with two dominant alleles for tall plant (TT) and the other with two recessive alleles for dwarf plant (tt).  The phenotype of the offspring in F₁ generation is tall plant but the genotype is Tt.  The F₁ heterozygote produces four kinds of gametes. When this plant self-pollinates, the T and t egg and sperm cells combine randomly to form ¼TT (tall), 2/4 Tt (tall) and ¼ tt (dwarf) offspring. The F2 generation has 1:2:1 genotypic ratio and 3:1 phenotypic radio.

No comments:

Post a Comment