Login

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

April 20, 2026, 11:50:43 pm

Author Topic: Determining modes of inheritance  (Read 2166 times)  Share 

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Smiley_

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 842
  • Respect: +147
  • School Grad Year: 2013
Determining modes of inheritance
« on: August 31, 2013, 05:36:51 pm »
0
I having trouble doing these,
I have the atar notes book and even with reading the detailed solutions im still so confused

swagsxcboi

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 367
  • Respect: +4
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2013, 06:43:53 pm »
+1
I having trouble doing these,
I have the atar notes book and even with reading the detailed solutions im still so confused
I'll be using R and r, R=dominant and r=recessive
it's either Autosomal Dominant, Autosomal Recessive, Sex-Linked Dominant, Sex-Linked Recessive
if it's autosomal dominant there is no way it can skip a generation, and any unaffected individual will be homozygous recessive. However, affected individuals can be either homozygous dominant or heterozygous. so you label every unaffected individual with rr. If their genotype is rr, then they must have inherited a 'r' allele from each parent. so you label each of the parents with '_ r '. If the parent is affected, their genotype is Rr, and if they are not affected, their genotype is rr. If this rule can work without any problems (and there is roughly an equal amount of females and males affected) then the mode of inheritance is autosomal dominant.
For autosomal recessive, any affected individual has the genotype rr. However, unaffected individuals can have either Rr or RR.
After labelling every affected individual with rr, you must realise that they have obtained a 'r' from each parent, so you label the parent as '_ r'. If the parent is not affected, the other allele must be R. If this can work throughout your entire pedigree, (and there is roughly an equal amount of females and males affected) then the mode of inheritance is autosomal recessive.
For sex-linked, you must understand that males=XY and females=XX
for sex-linked traits, the genes are located on the X chromosome only (males can not be carriers). Also, the father will always pass on his X chromosome to his daughter, so in sex-linked dominant, every affected father will have an affected daughter.
For sex-linked dominant, label every unaffected male as XrY and every affected male as xRY
Then you must trace back to their parents. The X chromosome of this individual came from mother and the Y chromosome came from the father. So you can label the mother as either XrX_ or XRX_
If you can do this without any problems, then the mode of inheritance is most likely sex linked dominant
For sex-linked recessive, label every unaffected male as XRY and every affected male as XrY
Again, you must trace back to the parents as label the mother as XRX_ or XrX_

I'm not the best teacher and I apologise if this wasn't useful

2013: Biology [47]

2014 AIMS: English (37)    Methods (37)    Business Management (30)    Chemistry (40)


2015 AIMS:
Applied Science/Physiotherapy Practice at La Trobe

Feel free to PM me about Bio or anything :)

the girl at the rock show

  • Victorian
  • Trailblazer
  • *
  • Posts: 28
  • Respect: 0
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2013, 09:08:59 pm »
0
I having trouble doing these,

Do you mean determining them from a pedigree chart or the results of a cross? (e.g. they give you a phenotypic ratio)
2013: Biology [50]

Smiley_

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 842
  • Respect: +147
  • School Grad Year: 2013
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #3 on: September 01, 2013, 12:01:21 pm »
0
Do you mean determining them from a pedigree chart or the results of a cross? (e.g. they give you a phenotypic ratio)

both really arhh

psyxwar

  • Victorian
  • Part of the furniture
  • *****
  • Posts: 1354
  • Respect: +81
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #4 on: September 01, 2013, 12:15:31 pm »
+1
Try watching this series of videos:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbIHjsn5cHo
VCE 2013-2014
MD/BMedSci 2015-2020

Smiley_

  • Victorian
  • Forum Leader
  • ****
  • Posts: 842
  • Respect: +147
  • School Grad Year: 2013
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #5 on: September 01, 2013, 01:11:56 pm »
0

the girl at the rock show

  • Victorian
  • Trailblazer
  • *
  • Posts: 28
  • Respect: 0
  • School Grad Year: 2014
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #6 on: September 01, 2013, 02:54:00 pm »
+1
Here's a bit of advice on phenotypic ratios/crosses:

MONOHYBRID:
Aa x aa - phenotypic ratio is 1 dominant :1 recessive
Genotypic ratio: 1 Aa : 1 aa

Aa x aa - phenotypic ratio is 3 dominant: 1 recessive
3 (AA, Aa): 1 aa
Genotypic ratio: 1AA : 2 Aa : 1aa

Know about lethal alleles - for some genes, the homozygous dominant condition is lethal, so any zygote with AA will die during pregnancy (miscarriage). The results of the cross will be different to above.
For lethal alleles:
Aa x aa = 1Aa: 1aa (same as above since no offspring produced would be homozygous dominant)
BUT Aa x Aa = 2Aa : 1aa
I'm pretty sure it's also possible for lethal alleles to happen for the homozygous recessive condition for some genes.

DIHYBRID CROSS:

AaBb x AaBb - ratio is 9:3:3:1
9 dominant/dominant (AABB)
3 dominant/recessive (AAbb, Aabb)
3 recessive/dominant (aaBB, aaBb)
1 recessive/recessive (aabb)

Aabb x aabb - ratio is 1:1
1 dominant/recessive (Aabb)
1 recessive/recessive (aabb)

AaBb x aabb - ratio is 1:1:1:1
1 dominant/dominant (AaBb)
1 dominant/recessive (Aabb)
1 recessive/dominant (aaBb)
1 recessive/recessive (aabb)

If the genes are linked then the results will be different from above - 2 phenotypes will be more common.

Eventually, you should be pretty familiar with all the crosses above. My teacher says you shouldn't need a punnet square to work them out, especially the monohybrid crosses. And if you do a huge punnet square to work out the dihybrid phenotypes, you're just wasting time. So know them!

Hope I helped!
2013: Biology [50]

sparked

  • Victorian
  • Forum Obsessive
  • ***
  • Posts: 207
  • Respect: +7
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #7 on: September 18, 2013, 05:58:27 pm »
0
Autosomal Dominant: an affected child must have at least one affected parent.
Autosomal Recessive: can skip generations and appear random

X-linked recessive: Affected mothers have affected sons. Affected daughters have affected fathers.
X-linked dominant: affected sons have affected mothers. Affected daughters have at least one affected parent.
B. Bmed III UoM: Anatomy Major
ATAR: 99.55
English [50] - Studio Arts [49] - Biology [47]

https://sites.google.com/view/sparkedvce
^ $25p/h! Sparked VCE Biology Classes: Sat, Sun, Wed. 10 days left to sign up! (Includes full year notes!!!)

Achieve 50 in VCE English Headstart Lecture: https://goo.gl/forms/NPuCsLbh8dfKjMsb2

ctoom14

  • Victorian
  • Adventurer
  • *
  • Posts: 18
  • Respect: 0
  • School: St Joseph's College Geelong
Re: Determining modes of inheritance
« Reply #8 on: September 24, 2013, 12:35:42 pm »
0
i found this recently, not to sure if it helps...