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Chapter 12

Classical and Modern Genetics

Genetic Lingo
Genetic Lingo
Overview An organism is diploid if it inherits two variants, or alleles, of each gene, one from each parent. These two alleles constitute the genotype ...
Punnett Squares
Punnett Squares
Overview A Punnett square displays the possible genotypes offspring can inherit from two parental genotypes. If a trait’s inheritance pattern ...
Monohybrid Crosses
Monohybrid Crosses
Overview In the 1850s and 1860s, Gregor Mendel investigated inheritance by performing monohybrid crosses in pea plants. He crossed two plants that were ...
Dihybrid Crosses
Dihybrid Crosses
Overview To determine whether traits are inherited together or separately, Gregor Mendel crossed pea plants that differed in two traits. These parental ...
Pedigree Analysis
Pedigree Analysis
Overview A pedigree is a diagram displaying a family’s history of a trait. Analyzing pedigrees can reveal (1) whether a trait is dominant or ...
Probability Laws
Probability Laws
Overview The probability of inheriting a trait can be calculated using the sum and product rules. The sum rule is used to calculate the probability of ...
Multiple Allele Traits
Multiple Allele Traits
The Concept of Multiple Allelism Multiple allelism describes genes that exist in three or more allelic forms. Although diploid organisms, like humans, ...
Polygenic Traits
Polygenic Traits
When more than one gene is responsible for a given phenotype, the trait is considered polygenic. Human height is a polygenic trait. Studies have uncovered ...
Epistasis
Epistasis
In addition to multiple alleles at the same locus influencing traits, numerous genes or alleles at different locations may interact and influence ...
Pleiotropy
Pleiotropy
Pleiotropy is the phenomenon in which a single gene impacts multiple, seemingly unrelated phenotypic traits. For example, defects in the SOX10 gene cause ...
Nature and Nurture
Nature and Nurture
Many human characteristics, like height, are shaped by both nature—in other words, by our genes—and by nurture, or our environment. For ...
Law of Segregation
Law of Segregation
When crossing pea plants, Mendel noticed that one of the parental traits would sometimes disappear in the first generation of offspring, called the F1 ...
Law of Independent Assortment
Law of Independent Assortment
While Mendel’s Law of Segregation states that the two alleles for one gene are separated into different gametes, a different question of how ...
X-linked Traits
X-linked Traits
In most mammalian species, females have two X sex chromosomes and males have an X and Y. As a result, mutations on the X chromosome in females may be ...
Sex-linked Disorders
Sex-linked Disorders
Like autosomes, sex chromosomes contain a variety of genes necessary for normal body function. When a mutation in one of these genes results in biological ...
X-Inactivation
X-Inactivation
The human X chromosome contains over ten times the number of genes as in the Y chromosome. Since males have only one X chromosome, and females have two, ...
Non-nuclear Inheritance
Non-nuclear Inheritance
Most DNA resides in the nucleus of a cell. However, some organelles in the cell cytoplasm⁠—such as chloroplasts and mitochondria⁠—also ...
Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
In 1866, Gregor Mendel published the results of his pea plant breeding experiments, providing evidence for predictable patterns in the inheritance of ...
Test Cross
Test Cross
Alleles are different forms of the same gene. Humans and other diploid organisms inherit two alleles of every gene, one from each parent. An allele is ...
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