Sign In

In 1866, Gregor Mendel published the results of his pea plant breeding experiments, providing evidence for predictable patterns in the inheritance of physical characteristics. The significance of his findings was not immediately recognized. In fact, the existence of genes was unknown at the time. Mendel referred to hereditary units as “factors.”

The mechanisms underlying Mendel’s observations—the basis of his laws of segregation and independent assortment—remained elusive. In the late 1800s, advances in microscopy and staining techniques allowed scientists to visualize mitosis and meiosis for the first time.

In the early 1900s, Theodor Boveri, Walter Sutton, and others independently proposed that chromosomes may underlie Mendel’s laws—the chromosomal theory of inheritance. Researching sea urchins and grasshoppers, respectively, Boveri and Sutton noted striking similarities between chromosomes during meiosis and Mendel’s factors.

Like Mendel’s factors, chromosomes come in pairs. Reminiscent of Mendel’s law of segregation, these pairs become separated during meiosis such that every gamete (e.g., sperm or egg) receives one chromosome from each pair. Chromosome pairs are segregated independently of one another, corresponding to Mendel’s law of independent assortment.

The first concrete evidence for the chromosomal theory of inheritance came from one of its critics, Thomas Hunt Morgan. Morgan found that a mutation affecting the eye color of fruit flies was inherited differently by male and female flies, and demonstrated that this trait was determined by the X chromosome.

We now know that Mendel’s factors are DNA segments—called genes—at specific chromosomal locations. The independent assortment of genes on different chromosomes is a consequence of the random arrangement of chromosomes at the midline of a cell during metaphase I, which determines which genes segregate into the same daughter cells. Each homologous pair of chromosomes migrates independently of the others. The law of segregation corresponds to the movement of chromosomes during anaphase I which ensures, under normal conditions, that each gamete receives only one copy of each chromosome randomly distributed.

Tags

Chromosomal Theory Of InheritanceMendelMicroscopySub cellular StructuresMitosisMeiosisChromosomesHeritable ParticlesLaws Of SegregationIndependent AssortmentSomatic CellsGametesLaw Of SegregationLaw Of Independent AssortmentFertilizationGenetic MaterialGregor Mendel

From Chapter 12:

article

Now Playing

12.18 : תאורית התורשה הכרומוזומלית

Classical and Modern Genetics

49.7K Views

article

12.1 : שפה גנטית

Classical and Modern Genetics

96.6K Views

article

12.2 : ריבועי פנט

Classical and Modern Genetics

106.5K Views

article

12.3 : הצלבות חד-היברידיות

Classical and Modern Genetics

224.5K Views

article

12.4 : הצלבות דו-היברידיות

Classical and Modern Genetics

69.7K Views

article

12.5 : ניתוח אילן יוחסין

Classical and Modern Genetics

80.1K Views

article

12.6 : חוקי הסתברות

Classical and Modern Genetics

36.2K Views

article

12.7 : תכונות אללים מרובים

Classical and Modern Genetics

33.6K Views

article

12.8 : תכונות פוליגניות

Classical and Modern Genetics

63.9K Views

article

12.9 : אפיסטאזיס

Classical and Modern Genetics

42.0K Views

article

12.10 : פליאוטרופיה

Classical and Modern Genetics

36.2K Views

article

12.11 : תורשה מול סביבה

Classical and Modern Genetics

20.2K Views

article

12.12 : חוק ההפרדה

Classical and Modern Genetics

60.0K Views

article

12.13 : חוק המגוון העצמאי

Classical and Modern Genetics

50.2K Views

article

12.14 : תכונות מקושרות-X

Classical and Modern Genetics

49.6K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved