Chapter 10 Mendel and Inheritance

Cards (70)

  • Who is considered the father of genetics?
    Gregor Johann Mendel
  • What was Mendel's primary occupation while studying genetics?
    He was a friar and taught science.
  • Why did Mendel choose to study pea plants?
    They had many simple dichotomous traits.
  • What does it mean for a trait to be true breeding?
    It means they always produce offspring that look like the parents.
  • What is a monoecious plant?
    A plant that has both male and female reproductive structures in one flower.
  • What are some examples of dichotomous traits Mendel studied?
    Flower color, seed shape, and stem length.
  • What is Mendel's notation system for generations?
    • P: Parent generation
    • F1: First filial generation
    • F2: Second filial generation
    • F3, F4, F5: Succeeding generations
  • What is a backcross in Mendelian genetics?
    A mating of an offspring back to a parent or ancestor.
  • What is the result of a formal cross for one trait in Mendelian genetics?
    It shows the inheritance pattern of a single trait.
  • What were Mendel's hybridization results for flower color?
    • F1: 100% violet
    • F2: 705 violet, 224 white
    • F2 ratio: 3.15:1
  • What were Mendel's hybridization results for plant height?
    • F1: 100% tall
    • F2: 787 tall, 277 dwarf
    • F2 ratio: 2.84:1
  • What is a phenotype?
    The observable characteristic version of a trait.
  • What are alleles?
    Specific versions of a hereditary particle or gene.
  • What is the difference between dominant and recessive alleles?
    Dominant alleles mask others, while recessive alleles are masked.
  • What is a genotype?
    The specific combination of alleles carried by an individual.
  • What is the significance of Mendel's law of segregation?
    • Heredity is particulate.
    • Each parent carries 2 hereditary particles for each trait.
    • Particles segregate during gamete formation.
  • What is a test cross used for?
    To determine if an organism expressing a dominant trait is homozygous or heterozygous.
  • What is a pedigree analysis used for?
    • To study the inheritance pattern of human genetic diseases.
    • Useful when test crosses are not feasible or ethical.
  • What is alkaptonuria?
    A recessive genetic disorder affecting the metabolism of phenylalanine and tyrosine.
  • What is a dihybrid cross?
    • A cross involving parents that differ in two traits.
    • Example: Seed shape and seed color.
  • What is incomplete dominance?
    Neither allele is dominant, resulting in a blending of traits.
  • What is codominance?
    Two alleles affect the phenotype in separate, distinguishable ways.
  • What are multiple alleles?
    Three or more alleles for a gene that exist in a population.
  • What is a sex-linked trait?
    A trait associated with a gene located on a sex chromosome.
  • What is hemophilia?
    An X-linked recessive disorder affecting blood clotting.
  • What are lethal alleles?

    Alleles that can cause the death of the individual inheriting them.
  • What is Mendel's law of independent assortment?
    • Alleles for different traits segregate independently during gamete formation.
    • This means the inheritance of one trait does not affect the inheritance of another.
  • What is the expected phenotypic ratio from a dihybrid cross?
    1. 3:3:1
  • How does Mendel's work contribute to modern genetics?
    It established foundational principles of heredity and genetic inheritance.
  • What conclusions can be drawn from Mendel's monohybrid crosses?
    • Blending inheritance is not a viable explanation.
    • Inheritance is particulate.
    • Dominant and recessive traits exist.
  • What are the implications of Mendel's law of segregation?
    • Each parent passes only one hereditary particle to gametes.
    • Hereditary particles recombine randomly during fertilization.
  • What is the inheritance pattern for hemophilia in females?
    50% carrier, 50% hemophiliac
  • What is the inheritance pattern for hemophilia in males?
    50% normal, 50% hemophiliac
  • What defines a lethal allele?
    An allele that shortens the average normal lifespan
  • What is Huntington's Disease classified as?
    A dominant disorder causing progressive breakdown of neurons
  • What does Mendel's Law of Segregation state?
    Each parent passes only one hereditary particle into each gamete
  • What are the key points of Mendel's Law of Segregation?
    • Heredity is particulate
    • Each true breeding parent carries 2 hereditary particles for each trait
    • Particles separate during gamete formation
    • Random recombination occurs during fertilization
  • What is Mendel's Second Law?
    The Law of Independent Assortment
  • How does chromosomal crossover affect gene inheritance?
    It allows genes on the same chromosome to behave independently
  • What is epistasis in genetics?
    When one gene affects the expression of another gene