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GENETICSChapter 11, Section 2
Incomplete Dominance Neither allele seems dominant Result is an intermediate phenotype When the offspring of two homozygous
parents show intermediate phenotype Example: A red flower and a white
flower are crossed. The result is a pink flower. Nothing is dominant.
Multiple Alleles A trait that is controlled by more than
two alleles is controlled by this. Produce more than three phenotypes of
that trait Blood type produces four phenotypes (A
blood, B blood, AB blood, and O blood) Alleles are A, B, and O. O is recessive to both A and B A and B are both dominant Possible genotypes: AA, AO, BB, BO, AB,
OO
Polygenic Inheritance Occurs when a group of gene pairs acts
together to produce a trait. More than one gene contributes to the
phenotype Many alleles, examples: eye color, skin
color, height, weight, intelligence, behavior Traits vary over a wide range Environment plays an important role in the
expression of traits controlled by this
Impact of Environment Your environment plays a role in how
some of your genes are expressed or whether they are expressed at all.
Environmental influences can be external or internal.
You might be able to influence their expression by the decisions you make. We will discuss examples.
Mutations Errors in the DNA when it is copied inside
of a cell—changes in genes Not all mutations are harmful Possible causes: X-rays, sunlight,
chemicals
Problems can also occur if the incorrect number of chromosomes is inherited because of mistakes in the process of meiosis.
Example—Down’s syndrome results when three copies of chromosome 21 are produced
Recessive Genetic Disorders Disorders caused by recessive genes
Cystic fibrosis—thick mucus builds up in the lungs and it is hard to breathe, also hard to digest food because mucus reduces the flow of substances necessary for digestion
Sex Determination Dad determines the sex of the child
Alleles for females: XX Alleles for males: XY
Each parent gives one allele and a mom can only give an X.
Sex-Linked Disorders Sex-linked gene—an allele inherited on a
sex chromosome Example: color blindness caused by a
trait on the X chromosome Males are colorblind if their X has the
trait Females are colorblind if BOTH of their
X’s has the trait.
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