Vocabulary:
Gene: DNA segment that may code for a specific trait, built of nucleotides, maintain genetic continuity and transfer information from generation to generation
Proteins: Different chemical complexes that form different working parts of a cell/body/life process, ended within a gene
Mendel: Discovered traits are inherited, did work in 1866 on peas. Called genes ‘heredity units’, did controlled experiments. His work was ignored during his life, later discovered
Law of segregation: Separation of two alleles of the same gene during gamete formation
Law of independent assortment: Alleles of different genes segregate independently of each other during meiosis
Dominance and recessiveness: Some alleles mask the expression of others
Chromosomal theory of inheritance: Proposed by Walter Sutton, Theodor Boveri, and Thomas Hunt Morgan, states that Mendelian factors (genes) have specific sites (loci) along chromosomes and the chromosome undergoes segregation and independent assortment
Recombinant Technology: Started the era of cloning, started in the 1970s when researchers discovered enzymes in bacteria that cut out viral DNA, allowed for specific parts of DNA to be removed/added to all other kinds of organisms
Human Genome Project (HGP): IN 2003, coordinated effort to sequence all of the human DNA, illustrated there are sets of important genes for cellular function and reproduction
Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs): Result of the manipulation of an organism’s genes to alter or enhance certain traits, common in agriculture
CRISPR: A type of gene editing experimentally treating sickle cell anemia since 2021, replaces DNA that causes SCA causing bone marrow cells to function as intended
Central Dogma: DNA → RNA → Protein, with DNA transcribing into RNA which is translated into proteins unidirectionally
Plasmid: A protective molecule that encases certain genetic material when implanting between organisms, to prevent natural breakdown by the host cell
Genome: The complete set of genetic instructions for a given organism, made by either DNA or RNA. Measures as a haploid, with only one copy of the DNA
Genomics: The field that studies how different traits and genes interact with each other
Human genome project: Done in 2003, sequences the entire human genome and gave info to bioinformatics about disease susceptibility
Proteomics: Study of protein sets present in cells
Bioinformatics: Uses hardware to process protein and genetic data
Karyotype: The organization of homologous pairs of chromosomes for an organism
Hox genes: Important genes that specify where different parts of the body belong, exist in clusters
Physical trait: Something in appearance, less simple than Punnett squares, typically controlled by multiple genes and sometimes outside factors like nutrition and environment
Disease predisposition: Varying factors in genes may indicate higher risk for developing specific conditions