MBG 2040 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Punnett Square, Zygosity, Zygote

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Chapter 3: the principle of dominance: in a heterozygote, one allele may conceal the presence of another. Some alleles control the phenotype, even if they are present only in a single copy: the principle of segregation: in a heterozygote, two different alleles segregate from each other during the formation of gametes. An allele is transmitted to the next generation, even if it was present with a different allele in a heterozygote. This is because of the pairing and subsequent separation of homologous chromosomes during meiosis: the principle of independent assortment: the alleles of different genes segregate, or assort, independently of each other. This is a statement about genetic transmission, based on the behaviour of different pairs of chromosomes during meiosis. Applications of mendel"s principles: the punnett square, the forked-line method, the probability method. When a heterozygote produces gametes, half contain one allele, and half contain the other.

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