2.6 - How is cystic fibrosis inherited? Flashcards

1
Q

What is meant by homozygous dominant?

A

have 2 of the same dominant alleles

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2
Q

What does homozygous recessive mean?

A

having 2 of the same recessive alleles

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3
Q

What does heterozygous mean?

A

having 2 different alleles

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4
Q

Define monohybrid inheritance.

A

when the inheritance of one single allele from 2 parents is controlled by one gene

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5
Q

What are the 5 steps to drawing a complete punnet square diagram?

A
  1. give parents genotypes
  2. give possible parents gametes
  3. draw & fill in Punnett square
  4. make a key matching genotypes -> phenotypes
  5. give probability or ratio
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6
Q

define codominance.

A

when both alleles are expressed

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7
Q

define incomplete dominance

A

condition in which a dominant allele does not completely mask effects of recessive allele

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8
Q

What are homologous chromosomes?

A

chromosomes that can pair as they contain sequences for the same genes

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9
Q

What is a locus?

A

position of a gene on a chromosomes (each allele for a characteristics will at the same position on the same chromosome)

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10
Q

What do chi squared test determine?

A

significance between 2 sets of data by allowing us to compare expected to observed results

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11
Q

What are the 4 steps of using the chi squared test?

A
  1. work out expected results
  2. work out observed results
  3. calculate difference between 2 & square difference
  4. divide each squared difference by expected value & add up of all of these answers to work out X^2
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12
Q

What do critical values tell us?

A

probability that the difference between our expected & observed results are due to chance

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13
Q

In chi-squared tests, what has to happen for the null hypothesis to be rejected?

A

calculated ‘chi-squared’ value has to be greater than the critical value

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14
Q

Why are chi-squared tests important? why are they particularly important in genetics?

A

used to test the hypothesis that the observed & expected results are different - to verify inheritance patterns

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15
Q

What is meant by the degrees of freedom? Why do we do this?

A

we need to take into account the size of our sample - to compensate for the value of x^2 being large when there are many results

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16
Q

How do you calculate the degrees of freedom?

A

number of classes of data - 1