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Genetics | Science of biological inheritance |
Homozygous | Having identical alleles for a trait |
Heterozygous | Having two different alleles for a trait |
Allele | One of two or more alternate forms of a gene |
Genotype | Describes the genes of an organism |
Phenotype | Describes the appearance of a trait |
Dominant | Allele that can cover up a recessive allele |
Probability | Chance of an event happening |
Mutation | Genetic change in the DNA |
Genetic disorder | Harmful mutation produced by a gene or chromosome. |
Sex linked inheritance | Genes carried on the sex chromosomes is called: |
Pedigree | Record that show the inheritance a trait in a family |
Punnett square | A way to predict the different type of offspring in a cross |
Law of Segregation | When alleles on homologous chromosomes are separated during meiosis. |
Law of Independent Assortment | The law that states that different traits do not affect the inheritance of other traits |
Heredity | Passing of traits from one generation to the next |
Monohybrid cross | Cross between two organisms that involve observing the inheritance of one trait |
Dihybrid cross | Cross between two individuals that involve observing the inheritance of two traits |
Mendel | Father of modern genetics |
Nondisjunction | When two chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis |
Monosomy | Missing one chromosome in a pair |
Trisomy | Having an extra chromosome in a pair (3) |
Incomplete dominance | When two different alleles together produce an intermediate (blended) phenotype |
Co-dominance | Both genes in a heterozygote are expressed |
Polygenic inheritance | When more than one set of alleles control a trait |
Meiosis | Type of nuclear division that produces egg and sperm. |
Haploid | Term meaning half of the total chromosomes. |
Diploid | Term meaning total chromosomes in an organism. |
Synapsis | The connecting together of homologous chromosomes in meiosis. |
Tetrad | Group of two homologous chromosomes together. |
Oocyte | Only cell in the female's body that goes through meiosis. |
Spermatocyte | Only cell in the male's body that goes through meiosis. |
Gamete | Another name for a sperm or egg cell. |
Germ cell | Another name for a sperm or egg cell. |
Fertilization | The process of egg uniting with sperm. |
Zygote | First cell of a new baby--a fertilized egg. |
Karyotype | A chart with the chromosomes arranged in pairs by size. |
Homologous | Chromosomes from mom and dad that match are said to be ______________ chromosomes. |
Somatic | Body cells are also said to be ________ cells. |
Crossing Over | When homologous chromosomes switch genes during synapsis. |
Down's Syndrome | Trisomy 21. |
Interkinesis | The time between the two divisions of meiosis. |
Egg | Female gamete. |
Sperm | Male gamete. |
Gametogenesis | Process of producing gametes. |
Spermatogenesis | Process of producing sperm. |
Oogenesis | Process of producing the egg. |
Polar bodies | Three cells that do not become the egg during oogenesis. |
Spontaneous | Mutations that occur without any known reason are said to be: |
Germ | Mutations that effect the egg and sperm are called ________ mutations. |
Mental retardation | Chromosome number disorders are the number one cause of: |
Turner's syndrome | Disorder where the girl is missing one X chromosome. |
Klinefelter's syndrome | Disorder where the male has an extra X chromosome. |
Amniocentesis | Process where a needle is used to get the baby's cells from the mother's uterus. |
Polyploidy | A condition where an organism has more than two sets of chromosomes. |
Nullisomy | A condition where an organism is missing a pair of homologous chromosomes. |
Tetrasomy | A condition where a person has a whole extra homologous pair. |
Genetic recombination | The getting of different combinations of genes in an organism. |
Law of Random Assortment | The way the homologous pairs line up on the equator is totally by chance is called the: |
Test cross | A cross done between an unknown parent and a homozygous recessive parent. Look at offspring results to determine the unknown parent's genotype. |
Cross | A mating. |
Trait | A variation of a particular characteristic. |
Blending Hypothesis | Idea that offspring always get a blend of traits from their parents. It was discarded. |
Particulate Theory of Inheritance | The idea from Mendel that parents pass distinct "factors" on to their children. |
Chromosome Theory of Inheritance | The idea that genes are located on chromosomes. |
Gene locus | The exact location of a gene on a chromosome. |
p side | The top and shortest part of a chromosome. |
q side | The bottom and longest part of a chromosome. |
Gene map | A picture showing all of the gene loci on a chromosome. |
Carrier | A heterozygous individual that has a recessive disease gene in their genotype. |