MBG 2040 Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Penetrance, Chromatin, Pleiotropy

126 views3 pages

Document Summary

Assumption: if the trait is rare and autosomal recessive, individuals who marry or mate into the family are not carriers the(cid:455) are ho(cid:373)oz(cid:455)gous for the (cid:862)(cid:374)or(cid:373)al(cid:863) allele, u(cid:374)less there is evidence to the contrary. Clues to look for in a pedigree: usually appears in both sexes with equal frequency, tends to skip generations, affected offspring born from unaffected parents, autosomal dominant. Assumption: for traits that are rare and dominant, affected individuals are likely to be heterozygous because mating between bb x bb would be infrequent. Principle of independent assortment: metaphase i, when homologous chromosomes align in one of two possible ways at the centre, each with equal frequency. Principle of equal segregation: anaphase i, when homologous chromosomes segregate: sex chromosomes. If different ratios are seen for two sexes, the gene is likely on the sex chromosome. Reciprocal cross: if reciprocal cross give different results, the gene is likely on a sex chromosome. Non-disjunction: x chromosomes do not segregate properly.

Get access

Grade+
$40 USD/m
Billed monthly
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
10 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions