why are males more likely to suffer from recessive diseases?
beacuase all genes on the non-homologous section of the chromosome have no corresponding chromatid on the Y chromosome, therefore will be expressed in the phenotype
autosomes
other chromosomes in the body (not sex chromosomes) - 22 pairs we inherit
codominance
when alleles of a gene have equal dominance - meaning that individual will have a different phenotype to either of the homozygous individuals, as both alleles expressed in phenotype
gene pool
all the alleles of a gene within a population of a species
allele frequency
number of organisms in a community which carry a particular allele
hardy-weinberg equation
1 = p2 + 2pq + q2
what does hardy-weinberg equation predict
frequency of dominant and recessive alleles in a population as long as certain factors remain the same
assumptions made about hardy-weinberg equation (5)
gene
a short section of DNA which determines a particular characteristic
variation
minor differences between individuals of the same species
monohybrid inheritance
inheritance of a single characteristic
locus
position of a gene on a chromosome
multiple alleles
some genes may have multiple alleles to code for 1 phenotype (eg. blood groups) but a gene will only EVER consist of 2 alleles
heterosomes
sex chromosomes
why are recessive alleles on non-homologous part of X chromosome always shown in the phenotype of a male?
- means mutated recessive alleles will be seen resulting in sex-linked disease
dihybrid inheritance
inheritance of 2 pairs of charecteristics (eg. tall plants an purple flowers)
what phenotype ratios will you usually get with dihybrid inheritance (homozygous individuals - eg. TT, tt, RR, rr)
9:3:3:1
co-dominant genes
both alleles in a gene are equally expressed (eg. black + white = grey offspring) – alleles are both equally as dominant
when will you see 9:3:3:1 dihybrid inheritance
when NO crossing over in Meiosis occurs
epistasis
expression of one gene hides the expression of another
principle that hard Weinberg is based on
frequency of dominant and recessive alleles in a population will remain the same from generation to generation provided certain conditions remain the same
transcription factors
specific molecules which move fro, cytoplasm, into nucleus to switch on/off genes so that transcription ca occur/be prevented
how do transcription factors work?
how does oestrogen activate transcription factor?