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How DNA Determines Traits - Liberty Union High School District
How DNA Determines Traits - Liberty Union High School District

... How Does DNA Determine the Traits of an Organism Introduction: In this simulation, you will examine the DNA sequence of a fictitious organism: the Snork. Snorks were discovered on the planet Dee Enae in a distant solar system. Snorks only have one chromosome with 6 genes on it. You job is to analyze ...
Genome-Scale CRISPR-Mediated Control of the Gene
Genome-Scale CRISPR-Mediated Control of the Gene

Name: _ Per: ______ Date: Chapter 14 Test Review Describe how
Name: _ Per: ______ Date: Chapter 14 Test Review Describe how

... 3. What are sex-linked genes? X-linked genes? Sex-linked genes are those found on either the X or Y chromosome. X-linked genes are found only on the X. 4. Which gender displays X-linked traits more frequently? Why? Males display the X-linked traits more because they only have one copy of the gene, s ...
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3-1 Section Summary

... which Mendel called the first filial, or F1, generation, were all tall. It seemed as if the shortness trait had disappeared. When the F1 plants were allowed to cross, about three fourths of the F2 generation were tall and about one fourth were short. From his results, Mendel reasoned that individual ...
Pedigree Charts
Pedigree Charts

... Pedigree Charts Pedigrees Breeding experiments are not ethical, or even possible, with  humans, as they are with plants and animals.  As a result,  pedigree charts provide one of the few ethical ways of studying  human genetics.  ...
Activity 3.1.7: Designer Genes: Industrial Application Genetic
Activity 3.1.7: Designer Genes: Industrial Application Genetic

... genes for fluorescent proteins. Several mail order colors are available which include green, red and blue fluorescence. The design of the proposed engineering must improve the human condition and meet legal concerns of federal regulatory ...
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Introduction to Genetics using Punnett Squares

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Clone
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... with the most desirable traits and breeding them. This has been done for centuries with plants as well as animals. Ex. Horses, corn ...
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... 11. One per 100 million copies of the DNA present/ at least one. The m-concentration for a bacterial culture is usually around 10-9 cells/ml of medium (that’s 1 billion cells/ml). 12. Substitutions/ The substitution of one base for another within a gene may or may not change the amino acid sequence ...
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... • Now, let us assume that a pure dominant parent will mate with a pure recessive parent. Complete the first Punnett square. • Assume that two of the offspring from the first Punnett square will mate (now do you see why we did not choose humans?). Complete the second Punnett square. • Excellent! We w ...
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Down load Lecture as PowerPoint

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Week of 2-13 to 2-17

... explain patterns in the data in the context of transmission of genetic information. Go over Describe the Teaching/ Mendel notes. different kinds of Modeling/ dominance: Demonstrating This is the teacherPractice with Complete, led part of the dihybrid incomplete, colesson and will crosses dominant. o ...
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... Study the inheritance of eastern filbert blight resistance from new sources, with an emphasis on Moscow selections and Holmskij OSU 1187.101. ...
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See Preview - Turner White

... deficiency of maternal gene expression.1 Patterns of Inheritance Single gene disorders are traits produced by the effects of a single gene or gene pair. Such traits are inherited in patterns originally described by Mendel as either dominant (transmitted virtually unchanged by hybridization) or reces ...
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... segments differ in length from person to person; for this reason they are used as genetic markers. Here, each length is designated by a letter, A through O. The two letters associated with each segment indicate the individual's genotype. Instructions 1. Under each column in the autoradiograph, write ...
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HRW BIO CRF Ch08_p01-66

... gametes are formed during meiosis. 12. The law of independent assortment states that the pairs of alleles for different traits separate independently of one another during meiosis. ...
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Understanding Domestication and Breeding by

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... Gregor Mendel is known as the Father of Genetics.  He studied pea plants, because they were easy to observe and reproduce.  Knowing that the male part of the plant produced sperm, and that the female part produced the egg, he was able to join the two reproductive cells. This is ...
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... More than one allele makes the trait ...
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Review Guide Genetics

... blend) Example: White-hair rabbits, Black-fur rabbits, black and white fur rabbits) ...
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... blend) Example: White-hair rabbits, Black-fur rabbits, black and white fur rabbits) ...
BioBoot Camp Genetics
BioBoot Camp Genetics

... blend) Example: White-hair rabbits, Black-fur rabbits, black and white fur rabbits) Incomplete dominance – trait where the 2 alleles are neither dominant nor recessive so the resulting phenotype is a blending of the two traits. Example: red roses, white roses, pink roses Sex-linked – a trait associa ...
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Notes-Mendel and nonMendel genetics

... •hypothesized each characteristic controlled by separate factor •since each characteristic had 2 alternative forms, must be pair of factors for each trait ...
PowerPoint - New Mexico FFA
PowerPoint - New Mexico FFA

... environment. Their phenotype is either one thing or the other. These traits most easily show how genes are inherited. An example is coat color.  Quantitative traits are traits controlled by several ...
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Quantitative trait locus

A quantitative trait locus (QTL) is a section of DNA (the locus) that correlates with variation in a phenotype (the quantitative trait). The QTL typically is linked to, or contains, the genes that control that phenotype. QTLs are mapped by identifying which molecular markers (such as SNPs or AFLPs) correlate with an observed trait. This is often an early step in identifying and sequencing the actual genes that cause the trait variation.Quantitative traits are phenotypes (characteristics) that vary in degree and can be attributed to polygenic effects, i.e., the product of two or more genes, and their environment.
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