BSC 114 Chapter Notes - Chapter 14: Dihybrid Cross, Epistasis, Quantitative Trait Locus

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A heritable feature that varies among individuals, such as flower color, is called a character. Each variant for a character, such as purple or white color for flowers, is called a trait. The mating or crossing of two true-breeding varieties is called hybridization. The true-breeding parents are referred to as the p generation, and their hybrid offspring are the f1 generation. Allowing these f1 hybrids to self-pollinate produces an f2 generation. Mendel developed a four-pronged model to explain the 3:1 inheritance pattern that he consistently observed among the f2 offspring in his pea experiments. Alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characters. > alternative versions of genes are called alleles. For each character, an organism inherits two copies of a gene, one from each parent. If the two alleles at a locus differ, then one, the dominant allele, determines the organism"s appearance; the other, the recessive allele, has no noticeable effect on the organism"s appearance.

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