What is the law of independent assortment? (2)
Pairs of alleles are inherited independently of one mother if their gene loci are on separate chromosomes
- these are unlinked genes
Why does the law of independent assortment occur?
Due to the random orientation of homologous pairs during MI of meiosis
What does the independent segregation of unlinked genes result in? (3)
What does the a dihybrid cross determine?
What is a linkage group?
Group of genes whose loci are on the same chromosome and don’t independently sort
What are 3 characteristics of linked groups of genes?
What did Thomas Human Morgan’s experiment involving fruit flies demonstrate?
Demonstrated that linked genes were not independently assorted
How did Morgan discover that there was a clear sex bias in phenotypic distribution? and
when cross-breeding red-eyed wild types with white-eyed mutants
- all female offspring of red-eyed, but all male offspring of a white-eyed females were also white
what was the conclusion that Morgan made from the experiment of the fruit flies of red-eyed wild types and the white-eyed mutants?
Morgan described this distribution as ‘sex-limited’ inheritance and inferred it was caused by the gene for eye colour bein located on a sex chromosome
what proposals did Morgan make based on the data which showed that the number of different traits in fruit flies did not conform to Mendelian ratio? (2)
what conclusion did Morgan make when he observed that the amount of crossing over between genes differed depending on the combination traits? what did Morgan do with this information? (2)
what are recombinants of linked gene?
combinations of genes not found in the parents
what do recombinants occur as a result of? and what does this cause? (3)
crossing over of genetic material during prophase I of meiosis
if linked genes become separated by a chismata there will be an exchange of alleles between the non-sister chromatids
create new allele combinations that are different to the parent
why would the frequency of recombinant phenotypes within a population be lower than the non-recombinant phenotypes?
because crossing over is a random process and chismata do not form at the same location with every meiotic division
what is the relative frequency of recombinant phenotypes dependent on? (3)
how can recombinant phenotypes be identified?
test cross
why would offspring with unlinked genes have an equal possibility of inheriting any potential phenotypic combination?
due to random segregation of alleles via independent assortment
what will offspring with linked genes only express? (2)
the phenotypic combinations present in either parent
unless crossing over occurs
what will occur less frequently than linked parental phenotypes?
unlinked recombinant phenotypes
what are chi-squared tests?
statistical measure that are used to determine whether the difference between an observed and expected frequency distribution is statistically significant
what does is suggest if observed frequencies do not conform to those expected for dihybrid crosses? (2)
What is the process of doing a chi-squared test? (5)
what can variation in phenotypes for a particular characteristic be?
discrete or continous
what are monogenic traits? (3)