Vocab
Probability
Non-Mendelian
Inheritance
Chromosomal
Inheritance
Replication
100

Name for someone who has one gene for a recessive disease, but does not express the disease

Carrier (Heterozygote)

100

How do you find the probability of two independent events occurring together?

Multiply the individual probabilities

100

A blue koi is crossed with a yellow koi, and the resultant offspring are all blue-yellow checkered koi. What type of inheritance is this?

Co-Dominance

100

The presence of an extra chromosome in the genome, leading to disorders such as Edward Syndrome, Patau Syndrome, and Down Syndrome

Trisomy

100

Which of the following terms best describe DNA replication?

Conservative, Semi-Conservative, Dispersive

Semi-Conservative

200

The process of creating a second copy of a genome in preparation for mitosis or meiosis.

Replication
200

How do you find the probability of an event that can occur in two separate ways?

Add the individual probabilities

200

A red salamander is crossed with a blue salamander, and the resultant offspring are all purple salamander. What type of inheritance is this?

Incomplete Dominance

200

Occasionally, two separate genes with separate phenotypes do not appear to follow the Law of Independent Assortment. What are these genes called?

Linked Genes

200

What are the three parts of a DNA nucleotide?

Nitrogenous base, deoxyribose, and phosphate

300

The condition of having one or more extra set of chromosomes. Hint: Deadly in humans, but advantageous in several plants

Polyploidy

300

Purple flowers are dominant to white flowers. If you cross two purple heterozygotes (P1 generation), what are the odds you get a white flower?

1/4

300

A child has a mother with blonde hair and a father with black hair. However, the child is homozygous-recessive for baldness, so the hair color phenotype will never be seen. What type of inheritance is this?

Epistasis

300

The phenomenon that causes a gamete to have one or more chromosome missing or extra

Nondisjunction

300

What did Erwin Chargaff discover about DNA binding

Adenine always pairs with Thymine, Cytosine always pairs with Guanine

400

The state of a gene affecting or controlling the expression of another gene

Epistasis

400

Sickle cell anemia is a recessive trait. If two heterozygous carriers have three kids, what is the probability that all three have the disease phenotype?

1/64

400

A man with red-green color blindness has 100 children. Somehow, absolutely none of them have red-green color blindness. What type of inheritance is this?

X-Linked

400

List two of the alterations to chromosome structure that can change genetic material AND what happens in those alterations

Deletion - A chromosomal segment is lost

Duplication - A chromosomal segment is repeated and doubled

Inversion - Multiple segments of a single chromosome are flipped around

Translocation - A segment of one chromosome is moved to another

400

What is the difference between eukaryotic and prokaryotic DNA replication?

Prokaryotic replication has a single origin of replication around its circular chromosome, while eukaryotic has several origins around its linear chromosomes.

500

Pieces of DNA during replication that are 100-200 base pairs long and are a result of DNA polymerase's need to run 5'->3'

Okazaki Fragments

500

For human blood type, type A and type B are Codominant and are Dominant to type O. Additionally, Rh-positive is dominant to Rh-negative. If we know a mother is AB-negative and a father is O-positive (and they are homozygous for Rh-positive), what is the probability their child will be B-negative.

0% (The child cannot have a negative blood-type)

500

A population of cats contains 15 different phenotypes for eye color. After some testing, it is determined that eye-color is determined by a single gene locus. What type of inheritance is eye color in cats in this case?

What would it be if there were several gene loci?

Multiple alleles

Polygenic inheritance (or a mix of both)

500

In the context of linked genes on a specific chromosome, when an organism has a wild-type parent and a mutant parent it will have one wild-type chromosome and one mutant chromosome. When crossed with a mutant, most of the offspring of this organism will be "parental" and have either the wild-type or mutant trait for both genes. What will the other offspring be called?

Recombinant

500

Name three proteins involved in replication AND their functions

Helicase: Unwinds and separates strands

Topoisomerase: Relieves strain of unwinding ahead of the replication fork

Primase: Synthesizes RNA primers

Single-Strand Binding Proteins: Stabilize unwound strands

DNA polymerase I: Replaces RNA primers with DNA

DNA polymerase III: Adds nucleotides to growing new strands

Nuclease: Cuts out incorrect nucleotides

Ligase: Joins Okazaki fragments of lagging strand