DAT bio chapter 7. Heredity P2 Flashcards

1
Q

nondisjunction

A

improper segregation of
chromosome pairs during anaphase; it produces
daughter cells with an incorrect number of
chromosomes.

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2
Q

Single nondisjunction of homologous

chromosomes during meiosis I

A

46 chromosomes in diploid parent cell

24, 24, 22, 22 chromosomes in haploid daughter
cells

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3
Q

Single nondisjunction of sister chromatids

during meiosis II

A

46 chromosomes in diploid parent cell

24, 22, 23, 23 chromosomes in haploid daughter
cells

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4
Q

Single nondisjunction of sister chromatids

during mitosis

A

46 chromosomes in diploid parent cell

47, 45 chromosomes in diploid daughter cells

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5
Q

Aneuploidy

A

abnormal number of

chromosomes in the daughter cells.

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6
Q

examples of aneuploidy

A

trisomy (3 chromosomes copies) or

monosomy (1 chromosome copies) can occur.

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7
Q

Down syndrome

A

a trisomy of chromosome #21

each diploid cell has 47 chromosomes total

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8
Q

Turner syndrome is

A

a monosomy of the X
chromosome in females (each diploid cell has 45
chromosomes total). Affected individuals have
physical abnormalities and sterility

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9
Q

Klinefelter’s syndrome i

A

is a trisomy of the sex
chromosomes in males, giving them XXY (each
diploid cell has 47 chromosomes total). Individuals
usually have disorders in intellectual, physical, and
reproductive developmen

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10
Q

test-cross pairs what and what

A

pairs unknown genotype with a homozygous recessive

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11
Q

How do we determine unknown genotype?

A

looking at the offspring from a test cross

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12
Q

True-breeding organisms are

A

homozygous for all the traits of interest

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13
Q

What is the F1 generation>

A

first
generation cross between true-breeding parents
with different alleles. The offspring are all
heterozygous.

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14
Q

What is the F2 generation?

A

second generation cross between the
heterozygous offspring from the F1 generation.
This is where Mendel’s three laws can be studied

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15
Q

What is a monohybrid cross?

A

single gene is examined from 2 generations. In the F2 generation, the genotype ratio
(AA:Aa:aa) should be (1:2:1) and the phenotype
ratio (dominant:recessive) should be (3:1).

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16
Q

Dihybrid cross

A

two genes on separate chromosomes are examined. The phenotype ratio is (9:3:3:1).

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17
Q

single allele

crosses you should memorize

A
Homozygous x homozygous = 1/1 AA or
1/1 Aa or 1/1 aa
2. Homozygous x heterozygous = ½ AA (or
aa) and ½ Aa
3. Heterozygous x heterozygous = ¼ AA, ½
Aa, ¼ aa
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18
Q

What does pedigree charts do?

A

track inherited traits
over many generations to see inheritance
patterns.

19
Q

Females are represented by what in pedigree charts

A

circles

20
Q

males are represented by what in pedigree charts?

A

squares

21
Q

Individuals

affected and unaffected by the trait in question are represented how?

A

shaded for affected individuals and unaffected individuals are not shaded/

22
Q

Individuals

affected and unaffected by the trait in question are represented how?

A

shaded for affected individuals and unaffected individuals are not shaded/

23
Q

recombinant gametes s

A

gametes (sex cells) that receive the genetically unique chromatids (new combination of alleles)

24
Q

non-recombinant

gametes

A

gametes that receive
parental chromatids (alleles match parent’s
alleles)

25
Q

Linked genes location

A

are found close together on the same

chromosome

26
Q

How do we calculate the distance of linked genes

A

by looking at recombination
frequencies, we can deduce the relative distance
between these genes.

27
Q

what is one map unit

A

chromosomal
distance that would allow 0.01 crossover events
per generation.

28
Q

Example of map unit

A

20 map units would mean 0.2
crossover events occur between the two genes per
generation, or that there is a 20% chance of
recombination.

29
Q

Recombination frequencies of less than 50%

mean what?

A

two genes are linked

30
Q

. A random

assortment of unlinked genes have what

A

50%

recombinant progeny.

31
Q

what can be drawn out using map units to infer the distance between genes on a chromosome?

A

linkage maps

32
Q

a group of genes that are usually
inherited together because they are located in
close proximity to each other

A

haplotype

33
Q

haplotype

A

a group of genes that are usually
inherited together because they are located in
close proximity to each other

34
Q

Sex-linked traits

A

come from genes located on the

sex chromosomes

35
Q

Most sex-linked disorders have

X-chromosome linkage. how many types of sex linked traits are there

A

three types

36
Q

X-linked dominant -

A
  • dominant inheritance on
    the X chromosome. Any offspring (male or
    female) that receive the affected allele will end
    up with the disorder
37
Q

X-linked recessive

A

recessive inheritance on
the X chromosome. For males, only one
affected allele is needed to cause the disorder.
For females, two affected alleles are needed to
cause the disorder because females have two
X chromosome

38
Q

Y-linked

A

inheritance on the Y chromosome.
Can only be passed from father to son. Will
always be expressed whether it is dominant or
recessive because males only have one Y
chromosome.

39
Q

Genomic imprinting

A

genes that are
expressed depending on parental origin and are
influenced by epigenetic factors. (different from sex-linked traits because they can
come from autosomal chromosomes (non-sex
chromosomes) as well.)

40
Q

X-inactivation

A

process by which one of a
female’s X chromosomes is inactivated, forming a
Barr body and preventing excess transcription.

41
Q

When can female carrier become an affected individual for a disease?

A

if her unaffected
X chromosome with a normal wild-type allele is
inactivated, leaving behind a recessive allele that is
not covered up.

42
Q

What does epigenetics do?

A

does not involve modifying the
genetic code, but instead the REGULATION of when
genes are expressed. Epigenetic changes are
heritable.

43
Q

examples of epigenetic changes

A
DNA methylation -
histone acetylation
histone de acetylation
heterochromatin
histone methylation