The Basic Principles of Heredity Flashcards
Locus (loci plural)
The site a gene occupies in the chromosome.
Alleles
Different form of a particular gene are alleles; they occuoy corresponding lovi on homologous chromosomes.
Homozygous
An individual that carries two identical alleles is a homozygous for that locus.
Heterozygous
If the two alleles are different in a locus the individual is heterozygous.
Dominant allele
One allele, the dominant one, may mask the expression of the other allelel or the recessive allele in a heterozygous individual.
Phenotype and genotype
Two individuals with the same phenotype may differ from each other in their genetic makeup or genotype.
Principle of segregation
During meiosis the alleles for each locus separate or segregate from each other. When haploid gametes are formed, each contains only one allele for each locus. It is a direct result of homologous chromosomes separating during meiosis.
Principle of independent assortment
Alleles of different loci are distributed randomly into gametes. The result can be genetic recombination, the production of new allele combinations that were not present in the parental generation.
It occurs because there are two ways in which two pairs of homologous chromosomes can be arranged at metaphase I of meiosis; the orientation on the metaphase plate determines the way chromosomes are distributed into haploid cells.
Monohybrid, dihybrid and test crosses.
A cross between homozygous parents that differ from each other with respect to their alleles at one locus is called a monohybrid cross; if they differ at two loci it is called a dihybrid cross.
A test cross is a cross between an individual of unknown genotype and a recessive individual.
Product rule
The probability of two independent events occrurring together can be calculated by multiplying the probabilities of each event ocurring separately.
Sum rule
The probability of an outcome that can be obtained in more than one way can be calculated by adding the separate probabilities.
Linkage
It is the tendency for a group of genes on the same chromosome to be inherited together. Independent assortment does not apply in this case.
Recombination of linked genes can result from crossing-over in meiotic prophase I (recombination also occurs from independent assortment).
Y chromosome
It determines sex in mammals. The X chromosome contains many important genes unrelated to sex determination that are required by both males and females. A male recives all his X-linked genes from his mother while a female receives them from both parents.
Pleiotropy
It is the ability of one gene to have several effects on different characters. Alternatively, alleles of many loci may interact to affect the phenotypic expression of a single character.
Incomplete dominance
The heterozygote is intermediate in phenotype.