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Notes # 8: Chapter 14 Mendel and the Gene Idea
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I. General Genetics Terms A) Trait: characteristic that can be inherited B) Allele: Alternate forms of a gene C) Dominant allele: priority over other alleles / Fully expressed D) Recessive allele: Only fully expressed if no dominants.
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E) Genotype: genetic makeup Represented by letters F) Phenotype: How genotype is expressed. G) Homozygous: Identical alleles for a gene H) Heterozygous: Different alleles
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II. Punnett Squares Determine possible outcomes for offspring A) Test cross: Unknown x homozygous recessive B) Monohybrid cross: One trait. 1) P generation: Parental generation – “true breeding” homozygous 2) F1: First (filial) generation – hybrid / heterozygous 3) F2: Phenotype ratio is always 3:1, dominant: recessive
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C) Dihybrid Cross: 2 traits 1) P: homo dom x homo recessive 2) F1: All heterozygous 3) F2: 9:3:3:1 (dom: rec/dom: dom/rec: rec)
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III. Dominance A) Complete dominance: Can’t tell difference between heterozygote and homozygous dominant phenotypes C) Incomplete dominance: Blending of dominant and recessive D) Codominance: both alleles are dominant. No blending. Both traits are present. Blood types
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IV. Mendel’s Rules of Inheritance Three Principles of Genetics A) Law of Dominance: Dominant trait masks recessive in a heterozygote B) Law of segregation: 1) Two alleles for same trait go into different gametes (sex cells) 2) defines allele 3) get one set of alleles from each parent 4)there’s a dominant and recessive
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C) Law of Independent Assortment pairs of alleles segregate into gametes independently (Not all the alleles from mom stick together nor from dad.)
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V. Patterns of Inheritance A) Linked genes: stay together during assortment B) Sex linked traits on sex chromosome Ex: color blindness
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