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Chapter 10 Mendel and Inheritance
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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?
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
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