Gregor Mendel Flashcards

1
Q

Who is Gregor Mendel

A

An Austrian monk who was the first person to attempt to discover scientifically the laws at work in heredity.
He conducted careful experiments on pea plants, concentrating on a few hereditary characteristics. He also applied mathematical techniques to analyse his results.

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2
Q

What were Mendel’s three laws?

A

By applying mathematical principles to his observations Mendel figured out three principles which have become the basic laws of genetics:
The Law of Dominance
The Law of Segregation
The Law of Independent Assortment

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3
Q

Basis of forming Law of Dominance

A

Basis: Mendel crossed homozygous round-seed pea plants with homozygous wrinkled seed pea plants. All offspring produced were heterozygous yet they were all round seeds.

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4
Q

Law of Dominance

A

A dominant expression of a trait is seen in the offspring when contrasting genes for the trait are present. The wrinkled-seed expression is recessive since it was hidden in the heterozygous offspring.

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5
Q

Basis of forming Law of Segregation

A

Mendel found that when he crossed hybrid tall pea plants, he obtained nearly three tall plants for every short plant.

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6
Q

Law of Segregation

A

During meiosis pairs of genes separate. One gene from each pair goes into a haploid sperm or egg. This means a sperm produced by a pea plant that is heterozygous for stem length (Tt) could carry a gene for tall (T) or a gene for short (t).

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7
Q

Basis of forming Law of Independent Assortment

A

During meiosis, homologous pairs of chromosomes separate. The genes located on one homologous pair (Rr) go into gametes independently of the genes located on another homologous pair (Yy). As a result gametes containing different combinations of genes are produced.

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8
Q

Law of Independent Assortment

A

A gene goes into a sperm or egg independently of other genes. Each gene is an independent unit that is inherited on its own. For example, a gene for wrinkled peas assorts independently of the gene for yellow peas.

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9
Q

Why did Mendel decide to use pea plants

A

They’re easy to grow, have a short life cycle, they’re reproduction could be controlled.

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10
Q

Artificial pollination

A

Involves removing stamens before natural pollination occurs. Later the mature pistil is hand-pollinated by applying the desired pollen to the pistil. The flower is covered to prevent further contamination

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11
Q

Factors contributing to Mendel’s success

A
  • He selected only a few characteristics/traits for study.
  • Cross-pollinated by hand
  • Started breeding experiments with pure strains for each characteristic studied
  • Characteristics in pea plants are determined by a single pair of genes (plant height T and t gene)
  • He repeated his experiments several times and kept records
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