inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

Define genotype.

A

The genetic constitution of an organism.

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2
Q

Define phenotype.

A

The expression of an organism’s genetic constitution, combined with its interaction with the environment.

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3
Q

What is an allele?

A

Different forms of a particular gene, found at the same locus (position) on a chromosome. A single gene could have many alleles.

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4
Q

How many alleles per gene do diploid organisms carry?

A

Two

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5
Q

What is meant by a dominant allele?

A

An allele whose characteristic will always appear in the phenotype, whether one or two are present.

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6
Q

What is meant by a recessive allele?

A

An allele whose characteristic only appears in the phenotype if no dominant allele is present, meaning two must be present.

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7
Q

What is meant by codominant alleles?

A

Two dominant alleles that both contribute to the phenotype, either by showing a blend of both characteristics, or the characteristics appearing together.

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8
Q

What is meant by homozygous and heterozygous?

A

Homozygous= both alleles are dominant, or both alleles are recessive.

Heterozygous= one allele is dominant, the other is recessive.

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9
Q

Define monohybrid inheritance.

A

Where one phenotypic characteristic is controlled by a single gene.

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10
Q

Define dihybrid inheritance.

A

Where two phenotypic characteristics are determined by two different genes present on two different chromosomes at the same time.

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11
Q

What is meant by sex-linkage?

A

Where an allele is located on one of the sex chromosomes, meaning its expression depends on the sex of the individual.

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12
Q

Why are males more likely to express a recessive sex-linked allele?

A

Most sex-linked alleles are located on the X chromosome. Therefore males only get one copy of the allele, so will express this characteristic even if it’s recessive. Since females get two alleles, this is less likely.

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13
Q

Which parent do males inherit sex-linked characteristics from?

A

Their mother, since the Y chromosome can only come from their father. Therefore if the mother is heterozygous for sex-linked alleles, she is a carrier and may pass on the trait on.

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14
Q

What is meant by autosomal linkage?

A

Where two or more genes are located on the same (non-sex) chromosome. In this case, only one homologous pair is needed for all four alleles to be present. For genes that aren’t linked, two homologous pairs are needed.

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15
Q

If IA and IB are codominant and IO is recessive, which alleles could the offspring express?

A

AB, A, B, O

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16
Q

What is meant by epistasis?

A

Where two non-linked genes interact, with one gene either masking or suppressing the other gene.

17
Q

Define the two types of epistasis.

A

Recessive epistasis= where two homozygous recessive alleles mask expression of another allele.

Dominant epistasis= where one dominant allele masks expression of multiple other alleles.

18
Q

What is the chi-squared test?

A

A statistical test to find out whether the difference between observed and expected data is due to chance or a real effect.

19
Q

What are the criteria for the chi-squared test?

A

● Data placed in discrete categories
● Large sample size
● Only raw count data allowed i.e. not
percentages
● No data values equal zero

20
Q

How is a chi-squared test performed?

A

The formula results in a number, which is then compared to a critical value (for the corresponding degrees of freedom). If the number is greater than or equal to the critical value, we conclude there is a significant difference between the observed and expected data and that the results did not occur due to chance.

21
Q

How can we use a chi-squared test in relation to the content of this topic?

A

We can compare expected phenotypic ratios with observed ratios to test our understanding of how different genes and alleles are inherited.