Meiosis
Cell division that produces reproductive cells (egg/sperm) in sexually reproducing organisms
Meiosis 1
Homologous chromosomes separate
Meiosis 2
sister chromatids separate
end result of meiosis
4 haploid daughter cells- all genetically different; produces sex cells
genetic variation
Heritable variations in a population
Gametes
sex cells formed by meiosis
Tetrad
structure containing 4 chromatids when they combine that forms during prophase 1 of meiosis 1
Nondisjunction
Error in meiosis in which homologous chromosomes fail to separate; during anaphase 1 or 2
sister chromatids
Replicated forms of a chromosome joined together by the centromere
chromosomal mutation
A change in the chromosome structure, resulting in new gene combinations.
crossing over
Process in which homologous chromosomes exchange portions of their chromatids during prophase 1 of meiosis 1.
Recombination
a combining of genes or characters different from what they were in the parents
Homologous chromosomes
Chromosomes that have the same structure and code for the same trait (1 from mom and 1 from dad)
Haploid cell (n)
A cell containing only one set of chromosomes (n).
Diploid cell (2n)
Somatic cells that have 2 chromosomes
Gene
A segment of DNA on a chromosome that codes for a specific trait
Mitosis
A process in which cells duplicate for asexual reproduction
Daughter cells in meiosis and mitosis
2- mitosis, 4- meiosis
46- mitosis, 23- meiosis
inversion mutation
A mutation involving a piece of a chromosome that breaks off and reattaches in reverse orientation.
Translocation mutation
mutation in which one part of one chromosome breaks off and attaches to another
Genotype
genetic makeup of an organism (ex: Bb)
Phenotype
An organism's physical appearance, or visible traits (ex: Brown eyes)
Allele
Different forms of a gene (ex: blue and brown eyes)
Dominant Trait
Describes a trait that covers over, or dominates, another form of that trait.
Recessive Trait
Masked by the dominant trait; a trait that is apparent only when two recessive alleles for the same characteristic are inherited
Gregor Mendel
Father of genetics
Homozygous
Having two of the same alleles for a particular gene (ex: AA or aa)
Heterozygous
An organism that has two different alleles for a trait (ex: Aa)
Punnett Square
diagram showing the possible gene combinations that might result from a genetic cross
Monohybrid Cross
a cross in which only ONE characteristic is tracked
Dihybrid Cross
Cross or mating between organisms involving TWO pairs of traits
Trait
A characteristic that an organism can pass on to its offspring through its genes.
F1 generation
the first generation of offspring obtained from an experimental cross of two organisms
F2 generation
Offspring resulting from interbreeding of the hybrid F1 generation.
incomplete dominance
A pattern of inheritance in which two alleles, inherited from the parents, are neither dominant nor recessive. The resulting offspring have a phenotype that is a BLENDING of the traits. (ex: red + white = pink)
Codominance
A condition in which both alleles for a gene are fully expressed resulting in BOTH being shown. (ex: red + white = red/white spots)
sex-linked traits
Traits controlled by genes located on sex chromosomes.
Principle of Independent Assortment
•genes can separate independently during the formation of gametes -If there are 2 different alleles of one gene on one chromosome, then each allele could end up in each daughter cell -inheritance of one trait has no effect on another
Mendel’s Law of Segregation
-2 alleles coding for the same trait separate or segregate during gamete formation -pass down 1 allele of each gene only
Gene Linkage
Genes located on the same chromosome