1.ALLELE- a segment of your
DNA (or gene)that codes for a trait in your body. You have two alleles for every trait in your
body (with one exception- naturally!).
2. Homozygous
alleles- this is what we call the genetic situation when both
parents give the same information (genes) for a trait. For example: both of
your parents give you the gene for blonde hair, you have no other choice than
to have blonde hair.
3. Heterozygous alleles-
this is what we call the genetic situation when your parents give you two
different genes for a trait. For example: Your Mom gives you the gene for brown
hair and your dad gives you the gene for blonde hair- now your Genome has to
decide which proteins to make- ones for brown hair OR ones for blonde hair- who
will win? read on to find out!
4. Dominant traits (or alleles or genes)- This
is when one of the alleles from a parent is stronger than the allele from the
other parent so it's the one you use and, therefore,it's the trait that you
have. Brown hair is dominant to blonde hair, therefore, you will have brown
hair and you won't even know that you have a secret hidden gene from your other
parent! (you can probably figure it out though- either by what your parents
look like or what your kids look like) We only use one letter to represent a
trait when we are trying to predict what traits a person will have, the
Dominant trait determines what the letter will be and it (dominant one) will be
uppercase- the recessive trait will use the same letter as the dominant trait,
but we show that it is recessive by making it lower case! 5.Recessive traits (or alleles or genes)- This
is when one of the alleles you get from a parent is weaker than another. You
don't use this gene because you favor the stronger gene. In this way it is a
hidden, secret gene, that you may never know you have. Even though you don't
use this gene in your body, you do have the potential to give this
"recessive" gene to your children and (depending on how the shuffling
goes during meiosis) they could end up having that recessive trait. EVER see
two brown headed people with a blonde baby- their baby- they both had a
recessive allele for blonde hair!!!!!!
6. Co-dominant alleles-
this is when you have heterozygous alleles for a trait (that's two different
alleles) and they are equally strong so they both show up!! This is
how you get stripes
and spots in fur- neat,hugh?
7. Incompletely
dominant alleles- this is when you have heterozygous
alleles for a trait (that's two different alleles) and they are equally strong,
so they duke it out and decide to compromise- they meet in the middle- you
no longer see the original traits but a medium version of each trait- think
Pink! As in: Red mixed
with White makes PINK!
8. Genotype- this is how we
refer to the "letters" or alleles you carry- you always have two- one
from mom and one from dad. TT or Tt where "T" is tall (dominant) and
"t" is short (recessive). 9. Phenotype- this his how we refer to the
visible PHYSICAL features that result from your alleles - "Tall" or
"Short". It's what we see and know you have with and/or without
knowing what your DNA says.
10.Gregor Mendel- a Monk/
gardener that figured out "genetics" using pea plants. He just cross
pollinated pea plants that had different colored flowers and figured out the
whole dominant/ recessive trait thing. Genetics that deals with only dominant
and recessive traits is even called "MENDELIAN GENETICS".
11. HYBRID- this is how we
sometimes refer to the crossing (or breeding) of two different different
organisms of the same species. YOU are a hybrid of your parents!!! when we are
crossing to test one trait it's refered to as a monohybrid cross ( two traits
would be a dihybrid cross)
12. Purebred- This is
the same thing as being homozygous, ( you could be homozygous dominant TT or
Homozygous recessive tt and still be considered "purebred")
13.X-linked or
sex linked- This refers to traits found on the last pair of
chromosomes ( the ones that determine whether you are a girl or a boy). Males
only have to have one recessive allele for a trait to show up if it happens to
fall in this area (most common x-linked traits are; colorblindness, hemophilia
and balding)
14. carrier- This is
how we refer to a person who is Heterozygous for a trait, they have a recessive
allele for something that they will never get, but they can give that allele to
their children who may possibly get the trait. ( Mom of cystic fibrosis child
is not sick, but child is because she and her husband were carriers of the
trait).
15. Pedigree- a chart that shows who of your ancestors carries a trait. circles are
girls, squares are guys and shaded shapes have the trait being charted. https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX56bRVBks0jhnCcpe51oCCa2pBgI__vKsQPDaYYojK67uG2Z0i3nDGCZmmFTzxWvsjGsDaNlxgmAzxiTnMEY291ydSlFu6kxOmjfps8wFhQXucVovWJrZN5KdZHf1RhHA0ujLXCrbpZgN/s1600/ftree.gif
16. Karyotype- a
picture that shows paired chromosomes- can use it to determine the sex of a
person or to check for Down's syndrome or any other trisomy ( 3 chromosomes
instead of 2).
17.Intermediate
inheritance- another term to describe a trait as being a result of
co-dominant alleles or incompletey dominant alleles.
18. Polygenic- when more than one gene contributes to a
trait- skin color is a result of the interaction between 7 different genes
(which means 14 different alleles!), eye color is the result of 3 different
genes.
19. Autosomal inheritance (or
autosome)- when an allele is found on any of the 22 chromosomes that
don't determine sex, so chromosomes 1 through 22 are autosomes. chromosome 23
is a sex chromosome.
20. Huntington's
disease- is a
disorder passed down through families in which nerve cells in certain parts of
the brain waste away, or degenerate. It is an autosomal dominant disorder located
on chromosome 4.
punnet square
help:
http://www.athro.com/evo/gen/punnett.html practice:http://www.athro.com/evo/gen/punexam.html overview of genetics:http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&hl=en-GB&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4GGLJ_en-GBUS290US290&q=punnet+square+introduction it's the first link- it's a ppt.