Chapter 9 Patterns Of inherintance Part 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Gene

A

Definition: region of DNA that contains information about a specific trait.

Example: Flower Color

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2
Q

Allele

A

Definition: a version of a gene

Example: Purple or Yellow

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3
Q

Heterozygous

A

Definition: Having two different alleles for a particular trait.

Example: Pp

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4
Q

Homozygous

A

Definition: Having two identical alleles for a particular trait.

Example: PP or pp

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5
Q

Genotype

A

Definition: The actual allele combination that is present on the chromosome.

Example: PP, Pp or pp

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6
Q

Phenotype

A

Definition: The physical characteristic that can be detected.

What the actual visible trait is.

Example: Purple Kernel or Yellow Kernel

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7
Q

Dominant

A

Definition: The allele that is expressed in a heterozygote (written as an uppercase letter)

Example: Purple (P)

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8
Q

Recessive

A

Definition: The allele that is not expressed in a heterozygote (written as a lowercase letter)

Example: Yellow (p)

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9
Q

Heredity

A

The transmission of traits from one generation to the next.

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10
Q

Genetics

A

The scientific study of heredity.

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11
Q

Gregor Mendel

A

Began the field of genetics in the 1860s

Deduced the principles of genetics by breeding garden peas

Relied upon a background of mathematics, physics, and chemistry

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12
Q

Character

A

A heritable feature that varies among individuals, such as flower color. Genes code for characters

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13
Q

Trait

A

Each variant of character. Eg purple or white flowers.

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14
Q

True breeding

A

When self fertilization produces offspring all identical to the parent.

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15
Q

Hybrids

A

Offspring of two different varieties are hybrids.

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16
Q

Cross fertilization

A

The fusion of male and female gametes (sex cells) from different individuals of the same species.

17
Q

P generation

A

True-breeding parental plants

18
Q

F1 generation

A

Hybrid offspring of the parental generation.

19
Q

F2 Generation

A

Cross of F1 plants produces an F2 generation.

20
Q

Monohybrid cross

A

A cross between two individuals in a single character is a monohybrid cross.

Eg. Plant with purple flowers x Plant with white flowers.

21
Q

Cross between a plant with Purple Flowers and a Plant with Whote flowers.

A

The F1 generation produces all plants with Purple flowers.

A cross of F1 plants with each other produced an F2 generation with 3/4 purple and 1/4 white flowers.

Purple is a dominant trait and white is a recessive trait for the character of flower color in this particular plant.

22
Q

Mendel’s 1st Law of Inheritance

A

Law of Dominance

states that in a heterozygous condition, the dominant expression of the trait will appear and the recessive condition will be unexpressed.

23
Q

Mendel’s 2nd Las of Inheritance

A

Law of Segregation: during gamete formation there is a random separation (segregation) of dominant and recessive alleles.

Inheritance of a single character ( which in the case of purple and white flowers was purple flower).

Not the blending Hypothesis, ( light purple flowers).

24
Q

3:1 ratio of the F2 generation

A

The F1 hybrids all have a Pp genotype.

When these plants cross, they end up with a 3:1 ratio where 75% of the plants in the F2 generation have the dominant phenotype and 25% have the recessive phenotype.

25
Q

Locus (plural, loci)

A

The specific location of a gene in a chromosome.

For a pair of homologous chromosomes, alleles of a gene are at the same locus.

26
Q

Homologous

A

Pairing of chromosomes at Meiosis that have the same structural features and pattern of genes.

27
Q

Mendel’s 3rd Law of Inheritance

A

Law of Independent Assortment states that the factors for different characteristics are transmitted independently.

Inheritance of flower color is not affected by inheritance of seed color

28
Q

Dihybrid Cross

A

A mating of parental varieties that differ in two characters.

Eg. Color of corn kernel and texture of corn kernel.

29
Q

Testcross

A

A testcross is the mating between individual of unknown genotype and a homozygous recessive individual.

For example, if between green and yellow pea color green is dominant, we know that a testcross has a recessive allele if 50% of the plants in the next generation have yellow peas, when it is crossed with a homozygous recessive plant.

30
Q

Pedigree

A

A diagram showing the lineage or genealogy of an individual and all the direct ancestors, usually to analyze or follow the inheritance of trait.