Biology, asked by kyliegeorge, 4 months ago

9. In corn, seeds can be either yellow (D) or purple (d). Seed texture can either be smooth (T) or wrinkled (t). Suppose a plant that is homozygous dominant for color and heterozygous for texture is crossed with a plant that is purple and wrinkled. Give all possible phenotypes and genotypes of the offspring.

10. Using the information given in #9, perform a cross between two plants that are each heterozygous for both traits. Give all possible genotypes and phenotypes of the offspring.

Answers

Answered by yadavpriyankaa7
0

Answer:9.                                     PHENOTYPES AND GENOTYPES                                                                       Two alleles for a given gene in a diploid organism are expressed and interact to produce physical characteristics. The observable traits expressed by an organism are referred to as its phenotype. An organism’s underlying genetic makeup, consisting of both the physically visible and the non-expressed alleles, is called its genotype. Mendel’s hybridization experiments demonstrate the difference between phenotype and genotype. For example, the phenotypes that Mendel observed in his crosses between pea plants with differing traits are connected to the diploid genotypes of the plants in the P, F1, and F2 generations. We will use a second trait that Mendel investigated, seed color, as an example. Seed color is governed by a single gene with two alleles. The yellow-seed allele is dominant and the green-seed allele is recessive. When true-breeding plants were cross-fertilized, in which one parent had yellow seeds and one had green seeds, all of the F1 hybrid offspring had yellow seeds. That is, the hybrid offspring were phenotypically identical to the true-breeding parent with yellow seeds. However, we know that the allele donated by the parent with green seeds was not simply lost because it reappeared in some of the F2 offspring (Figure 8.5). Therefore, the F1 plants must have been genotypically different from the parent with yellow seeds.

The P plants that Mendel used in his experiments were each homozygous for the trait he was studying. Diploid organisms that are homozygous for a gene have two identical alleles, one on each of their homologous chromosomes. The genotype is often written as YY or yy, for which each letter represents one of the two alleles in the genotype. The dominant allele is capitalized and the recessive allele is lower case. The letter used for the gene (seed color in this case) is usually related to the dominant trait (yellow allele, in this case, or “Y”). Mendel’s parental pea plants always bred true because both produced gametes carried the same allele. When P plants with contrasting traits were cross-fertilized, all of the offspring were heterozygous for the contrasting trait, meaning their genotype had different alleles for the gene being examined. For example, the F1 yellow plants that received a Y allele from their yellow parent and a y allele from their green parent had the genotype Yy.

By the end of this section, you will be able to:      Explain the relationship between genotypes and phenotypes in dominant and recessive gene systems     Use a Punnett square to calculate the expected proportions of genotypes and phenotypes in a monohybrid cross     Explain Mendel’s law of segregation and independent assortment in terms of genetics and the events of meiosis     Explain the purpose and methods of a test cross

Figure 8.5 Phenotypes are physical expressions of traits that are transmitted by alleles. Capital letters represent dominant alleles and lowercase letters represent recessive alleles. The phenotypic ratios are the ratios of visible characteristics. The genotypic ratios are the ratios of gene combinations in the offspring, and these are not always distinguishable in the phenotypes.

Explanation:

Similar questions