lab 1: mendelian genetics Flashcards

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1
Q

gene

A

-a hereditary factor that influences a particular trait
-portions of DNA that have the ability to code for a trait

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2
Q

allele

A

a version of a gene

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3
Q

locus

A

specific position on a chromosome where a particular gene is located

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4
Q

gametes

A

sex cells (sperm & egg)

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5
Q

genotype

A

a listing of the alleles in an individual (RR) (Rr) (rr)

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6
Q

phenotype

A

an individual’s observable traits

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7
Q

homozygous

A

having 2 of the same alleles (RR) (rr)

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8
Q

heterozygous

A

having 2 different alleles (Rr)

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9
Q

dominant allele

A

-an allele that is fully expressed in the phenotype of a heterozygote
-will always mask recessive alleles

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10
Q

recessive allele

A

-an allele that is masked when a dominant allele is present
-only expressed in homozygotes

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11
Q

pure line

A

individuals of the same phenotype that, when crossed, always produce offspring with the same phenotype

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12
Q

hybrid

A

offspring of crosses between parents with different traits

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13
Q

polygenetic traits

A

many genes coding for one trait

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14
Q

particulate theory of inheritance

A

-genes that govern traits are inherited as discrete units that remain unchanged as they are passed from parent to offspring
-asserted that genes are located on chromosomes

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15
Q

law of segregation (Mendel’s first law)

A

-the 2 alleles of a given gene segregates into separate gametes
-each gamete has an equal chance of possessing either member of a pair of homologous chromosomes
-when joined in fertilization they combine to produce a phenotype based on the rules of dominance
-gametes combine randomly

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16
Q

law of independent assortment (Mendel’s second law)

A

-genes on non-homologous or different chromosomes will be distributed randomly into gametes
-increases genetic variation

17
Q

what is the difference between Mendel’s 1st & 2nd law?

A

the key difference is that the 1st law describes the segregation of the alleles of a given locus into separate gametes during gametogenesis while the 2nd law describes the independent transmission of alleles of genes into daughter cells without the influence of each other

18
Q

what was Mendel’s experimental method?

A

-he removed the anther (male part) then dusted the stigma (female part) with pollen from the white plant
-the resulting seeds were planted & grew

19
Q

what is the p generation?

A

original parent generation (true breeding parents)

20
Q

what is the F1 generation?

A

generation after parents (all were purple heterozygotes in Mendel’s experiments)

21
Q

what is the F2 generation?

A

generation after F1 (Mendel let them self fertilize & they had a 3:1 ratio)

22
Q

what is the phenotypic ratio for a monohybrid cross?

A

3:1

23
Q

what is the phenotypic ratio for a dihybrid cross?

A

9:3:3:1

24
Q

simple dominance

A

-the dominant one masks recessive when present
-the recessive one only can be expressed when both copies present are recessive

25
Q

incomplete dominance

A

-a pattern of inheritance in which 2 alleles, inherited from the parents, are neither dominant nor recessive
-the resulting offspring have a phenotype that is a blending of the parental traits
-ex: if a red & white flower are breed together then it creates a pink one

26
Q

codominance

A

-a condition in which both alleles for a gene are fully expressed
-ex: if a pink & white flower was breed together, then the new flower is pink & white

27
Q

codominance example in blood types

A

type AB is a popular example since both A & B are dominant while type O is recessive

28
Q

what is the genotype of blood types?

A

-type A (I^A I^A) or (I^A i)
-type B (I^B I^B) or (I^B i)
-type AB (I^A I^B)
-type O (ii)

29
Q

what determines your blood type?

A

-the proteins called antigens are on the surface of all the red blood cells (if you have type A you have A antigens, type B has B antigens, type AB has both A & B antigens, & type O wouldn’t have any antigens)

30
Q

what antibodies would the blood types have?

A

-the antibody against the antigen it doesn’t carry
-type A: b antibodies
-type B: a antibodies
-type AB: none
-type O: a & B antibodies

31
Q

which blood type is the universal donor? a universal acceptor?

A

-type O = universal donor
-type O can only receive type O
-type AB is the universal acceptor

32
Q

how can we determine which blood type it is?

A

-to determine a person’s blood type, we add serums to blood samples & see if clumps form
-agglutination (clumping) occurs when blood cells stick & clumps together, when donor blood cells are incompatible with recipient serum

33
Q

how to understand which blood type it is based on the serum?

A

-will react positively if their type is in the serum = no clumps
-will react negatively if their type is not in the serum = clumps

34
Q

how do we know if a blood type is positive or negative?

A

-if you have positive, then you have the protein Rh on the surface of the blood cells
-if you have negative, then you do not have the Rh protein

35
Q

pedigrees (won’t be tested on but cool to know ig)

A

-a consistent graphical presentation of matings & offspring over multiple generations for a particular trait
-family histories
-disease trait: dominant or recessive?
-symbols: male = square, female = circle, affected = full, carriers = half filled in