This is what the acronym DNA stands for.
What is deoxyribonucleic acid?
The notation TT, for example, means there are this many dominant alleles in a genotype.
What is two (2)?
Describe the pedigree symbols for male and female.
Male - square
Female - circle
The origin of replication forming y-shaped areas is called this.
What is a replication fork?
The number of cells resulting from the meiotic division of one cell.
What is four (4)?
This type of bond joins base pairs on a DNA molecule.
What is a hydrogen bond?
An organism with two identical alleles for a particular trait is called this.
What is homozygous?
Chicken offspring that are white with black spots, and have black-feathered father and white-feathered mother, are an example of this type of inheritance at work.
What is co-dominance?
This is the symbol for marriage / mating.
This strand replicates in the opposite direction as the DNA is unwinding.
Chromosome pairs of approximately the same length, centromere position, and genes with the same corresponding positions.
What are homologous chromosomes?
These are the components of a DNA nucleotide.
What is deoxyribose, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base?
Mendel was studying these traits when he crossed pea plants (name two).
What are...
seed shape / seed color / flower color / pod shape / pod color / flower position / plant height
Describe the inheritance pattern for blood types.
Multiple alles and co-dominance
This type of disorder results from inheriting two defective recessive alleles of a gene, one from each parent.
What is a recessive disorder?
During prophase of meiosis.
This base is found in RNA but not DNA.
What is uracil?
The probability of producing a tall pea plant from a genetic cross between two hybrid tall pea plants.
What is 50% or 2/4?
Traits that are controlled by two or more genes is called this.
The genotype for individual #4 in this pedigree:
What is homozygous recessive?
In this step of replication, single stranded binding proteins are present.
What is initiation?
The result of crossing over.
What is the production of new allelic combinations?
This is what early scientists believed to be the genetic material of a cell.
What is protein?
What is the Law of Dominance?
The term that describes when one gene influences how another gene is expressed.
What is epistasis?
Why can individual II-3's genotype not be determined from this information?

Most individuals have the trait in question, which leads us to assume the it is a dominant trait. As one individual in the 2nd generation does not have the trait, the parents must be heterozygous. Therefore, II-3 could have inherited either a dominant or a recessive allele from either parent, making it impossible (without any further information) to determine whether she is homozygous dominant or heterozygous.
These *four* elements are absolutely necessary for DNA replication.
(Yes, there are many elements, but these are THE four most important)
What are a DNA template, DNA polymerase, primer, and nucleotides.
Discuss how crossing over would occur here.
It wouldn't. The pairs of chromosomes are not homologous.