Inheritance
DNA stuff
Variation
Key terms
Random (NZ themed)
100

How many alleles of a dominant trait do you need for that trait to be present?


1

100

What 3 things make up a nucleotide?

A base and a sugar phosphate backbone (which is phosphate + deoxyribose sugar)

100

What is the only source of new alleles?

Mutation

100

What's a gene?

A section of DNA that codes for a protein.

100

What did Nek Minit guy leave outside the dairy?

His scooter

200

In which type of dominance is a new intermediate phenotype created from only two alleles?

Incomplete dominance


200

Which four bases make up DNA?

guanine, cytosine, adenine, thymine

200

Name something external that could cause a mutation.

These are called mutagens. E.g. radiation, UV light, thalidomide, chemicals in general.

200

What's a mutagen?

Something that can cause mutations


200

What school did Francis go to? 

Whangarei Boys High School

300

In cases of complete dominance, if you cross a homozygous recessive individual with a heterozygous individual, what will be the predicted genotypic ratio of the offspring?

1:1, 2:2, 50%... heterozygous and homozygous recessive.

300

What's a triplet? 

A set of three bases (or nucleotides) that is read together & codes for an amino acid?

300

What is one reason that mutations are good? What is one reason they're bad?

Good: gneetic diversity. Bad: harmful mutations, lethal mutations. 

300

What is a homologous pair?

A pair of matching chromosomes (same # chromosome, one from each parent)

300

What's the name of the takahē we visited at Zealandia?

Orbell

400

If a trait is visible in a family tree, but not in every generation, what type of dominance does this show?

Recessive - carriers are unaffected.
400

What happens in translocations? 

Translocations are a type of chromosomal mutation. One section of a chromosome is removed and attaches to a different chromosome.

400

What two features of meiosis contribute to genetic diversity? What do they mean?

Independent assortment: chromosomes line up on the centre of the cell (metaphase plate).

Crossing over: sections of the sister chromatids swap with each other, creating new combinations of alleles.

400

What's the difference between a centromere and a chiasma

centromere = the point where two sister chromatids meet in a chromosome

chiasma = the point where two sister chromatids cross during crossing over only

400

What did Chris Hipkins accidentally say when he was talking about how it's hard to get out and about during lockdown?

Spread your legs

500
What are the possible blood types for the offspring of a couple with type A (heterozygous) blood and type AB? What type of dominance is seen in ABO blood groups?

B, AB, A (1:2:1).

Codominance (AB)

Recessive (O)

500

Describe what happens in frameshift mutations (which types are frameshift? What happens to the DNA?)

Insertions and deletions are frameshift mutations as they shift the reading frame (all bases move over one, so triplets all change)

500

Describe the number of chromosomes in a cell during meiosis I.

Cells start with 46. DNA replicates so that there are 2 copies (92), independent assortment happens and spindles form two groups of 46 so that when the cell divides, there are 46 chromosomes in each ( = a diploid cell).


(Or if you talked about chromosome pairs then 23, 46, 23).

500

What's the difference between sexual and asexual reproduction.

Sexual: 2 parents, creates diversity

Asexual: 1 parent, creates clones

500

What's the te reo term for genetics?

Mātai iranga