Punnett Square Help
Genetics Video
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Dominant vs Recessive Alleles
Mendel determined that the female parent contributes one factor, while the male parent contributes the other factor. Finally, one factor in a pair can mask, or hide, the other factor.
Ex: the tallness factor, masks the shortness factor
Gene – scientists use the word gene for the factors that control a trait
Allele – are the different forms of a gene
Ex: gene that controls stem height in peas, has one allele for tall stems and one allele for short stem
Each pea plant inherits two alleles from its parents – one allele from the egg, one from the sperm. A pea plant may inherit two alleles for tall stems, two alleles for short stems or one of each
An organism’s traits are controlled by the alleles it inherits from its parents. Some alleges are dominant, while other alleles are recessive
Dominant Allele – is a trait that always shows up, or is expressed, in the organism when the allele is present
Recessive Allele – is a trait that is hidden, or not expressed, whenever the dominant allele is present – a trait controlled by a recessive allele will only show up if the organism does not have the dominant allele
In pea plants, the allele for a tall stem is dominant over the allele for a short stem; therefore, pea plants with one allele for tall stems and one allele for short stems will be tall – the allele for tall stems masks the allele for short stems – only pea plants that inherit two recessive alleles for short stems will be short
Hybrid – is an organisms that has two different alleles for a trait
Ex: all F1 plants are tall because the dominant allele for tall stems masks the recessive allele for short stems
Symbols for Alleles:
Geneticists use letters to represent alleles
Dominant Alleles are represented by a capital letter
Ex: the allele for a tall stem is represented by a T
Recessive Alleles are represented by a lowercase version of the letter
Ex: the allele for a short stem is represented by a t
Two dominant alleles for stem height = TT
Two recessive alleles for stem height = tt
One dominant allele and one recessive allele for stem height = Tt
Punnett Square – is a chart that shows all the possible combinations of alleles that can result from a genetic cross – geneticists use Punnett squares to show all the possible outcomes from a genetic cross, and to determine the probability of a particular outcome
Phenotype – an organism’s phenotype is its physical appearance, or visible traits
Genotype – an organism’s genotype is its genetic makeup, or allele combination
Homozygous – an organism that has two identical alleles for a trait
Heterozygous – an organism that has two different alleles for a trait
Mendel determined that the female parent contributes one factor, while the male parent contributes the other factor. Finally, one factor in a pair can mask, or hide, the other factor.
Ex: the tallness factor, masks the shortness factor
Gene – scientists use the word gene for the factors that control a trait
Allele – are the different forms of a gene
Ex: gene that controls stem height in peas, has one allele for tall stems and one allele for short stem
Each pea plant inherits two alleles from its parents – one allele from the egg, one from the sperm. A pea plant may inherit two alleles for tall stems, two alleles for short stems or one of each
An organism’s traits are controlled by the alleles it inherits from its parents. Some alleges are dominant, while other alleles are recessive
Dominant Allele – is a trait that always shows up, or is expressed, in the organism when the allele is present
Recessive Allele – is a trait that is hidden, or not expressed, whenever the dominant allele is present – a trait controlled by a recessive allele will only show up if the organism does not have the dominant allele
In pea plants, the allele for a tall stem is dominant over the allele for a short stem; therefore, pea plants with one allele for tall stems and one allele for short stems will be tall – the allele for tall stems masks the allele for short stems – only pea plants that inherit two recessive alleles for short stems will be short
Hybrid – is an organisms that has two different alleles for a trait
Ex: all F1 plants are tall because the dominant allele for tall stems masks the recessive allele for short stems
Symbols for Alleles:
Geneticists use letters to represent alleles
Dominant Alleles are represented by a capital letter
Ex: the allele for a tall stem is represented by a T
Recessive Alleles are represented by a lowercase version of the letter
Ex: the allele for a short stem is represented by a t
Two dominant alleles for stem height = TT
Two recessive alleles for stem height = tt
One dominant allele and one recessive allele for stem height = Tt
Punnett Square – is a chart that shows all the possible combinations of alleles that can result from a genetic cross – geneticists use Punnett squares to show all the possible outcomes from a genetic cross, and to determine the probability of a particular outcome
Phenotype – an organism’s phenotype is its physical appearance, or visible traits
Genotype – an organism’s genotype is its genetic makeup, or allele combination
Homozygous – an organism that has two identical alleles for a trait
Heterozygous – an organism that has two different alleles for a trait