Loading...

Messages

Proposals

Stuck in your homework and missing deadline? Get urgent help in $10/Page with 24 hours deadline

Get Urgent Writing Help In Your Essays, Assignments, Homeworks, Dissertation, Thesis Or Coursework & Achieve A+ Grades.

Privacy Guaranteed - 100% Plagiarism Free Writing - Free Turnitin Report - Professional And Experienced Writers - 24/7 Online Support

What is mid digit hair

08/11/2021 Client: muhammad11 Deadline: 2 Day

PAGE

Lab #5 – At Home

Human Genetics

Pre-lab:

1. Explain what is meant when a gene is referred to as “dominant” or “recessive”:

2. Define genotype:

3. Define phenotype:

Purpose:

1. Understand how genetics relates to the diversity of the human population visible around us.

2. Find out the genotype of a real person.

3. Practice determining the results of genetic crosses.

Background:

Each living thing that reproduces sexually has two sets of chromosomes. One set of chromosomes is inherited from each parent. Each set of chromosomes carries a full set of genes, where each gene is the "code" for a particular type of protein. Having two sets means everyone has two copies of each gene.

Proteins have many roles in an organism and sometimes a single gene is critical in making a certain obvious trait (something observable, like dimples). You can think of each gene as a location and you can put specific information (allele) in each location. The different alleles for a particular gene may produce proteins with identical functions or very different functions. Each type of protein that an organism makes is a product of the alleles that it has. Often the resulting trait is a blend of the effects of the proteins from two alleles, but sometimes one allele (a dominant allele) produces a protein with an effect so powerful that it can completely cover up the effect of a protein produced by a weaker allele (a recessive allele). (2)

Humans are sexually reproducing organism and are different from each other in appearance and in their biochemical make up. Even so, if you compare any two people you will find that 99.9% of their DNA is the same. (3) Human genetic traits are difficult to study because of our relatively long life span and the limited number of human offspring produced. In addition, the number of chromosome pairs (23) increases the possible number of genetic combinations which in turn compounds the difficulty of studying human genetics. In spite of these difficulties humans have some genes that exhibit monohybrid inheritance. For these genes it is possible to get a good idea of your own genotype.

Procedure:

In this exercise you will observe either your own or someone else’s phenotype (part 1) and determine part of your/their genotype (part 2). Then you will figure out one possible genotype of a hypothetical child -a combination of your genes and the genes that are listed for that trait (part 3).

You will Submit the Report Page to Canvas.

Part 1. Determine your phenotype

Read the descriptions of the traits listed below and use a best guess to determine whether you have the dominant or recessive phenotype for each trait. Record the word that describes your phenotype in the spaces provided in the Table on the Report Pages at the end of the lab.

Example:

Trait

Your phenotype

Your possible genotype

Dimples A_

No Dimples aa

No Dimples

Part 2. Deduce your possible genotype(s)

Each of the alleles of a given gene are symbolized by an assigned letter. Normally the dominant form is symbolized by an upper case letter (e.g. E), and the recessive form is symbolized by a lower case of the same letter (e.g. e). If you express the dominant trait (phenotype) use only a single capital letter (e.g. E_ ) for your genotype since you don't know whether you are homozygous or heterozygous for that trait. If you express the recessive phenotype for a given trait you must be homozygous recessive, represented by two lower case letters (e.g. ee). Note: Many of the traits in this lab, while presented as under the control of a single gene, are hypothesized by some scientists to be controlled by several genes. For the purposes of this exercise we will assume the more simple, single gene inheritance.

Part 3. Predict Potential Offspring Phenotypes

The genotype of a potential mate is given in the Report Pages table. Use that information to predict one possible phenotype of an offspring. Record your possible genotypes for each trait in the table on the Report Pages at the end of the lab.

Example (answers are in red):

Trait

Your phenotype

Your possible genotype

Mate’s genotype

One possible phenotype of offspring

A

Dimples A_

No Dimples aa

No dimples

aa

aa

No Dimples

Human Genetic Traits

Dimples (A)

Dimples are small, natural indentations on the cheeks on one or both sides. Some people are born with dimples that disappear when they are adults; others develop dimples later in childhood. Dimples are highly heritable, meaning that people who have dimples tend to have children with dimples—but not always. Because their inheritance is not completely predictable, dimples are considered an “irregular” dominant trait. Having dimples is probably controlled mainly by one gene but also influenced by other genes.

Cleft Chin (B)

A cleft chin looks like a dimple or indentation in the middle of a person’s chin. This trait is due to a single gene with a cleft chin dominant and a smooth chin recessive.

Tongue Rolling (C)

The ability to roll the tongue upward from the sides (so it looks like an "O" or "U" from the front) is a dominant trait. It is probably the result of several genes with an environmental influence, though in genetics labs it is usually treated as a one-gene trait. It probably means that tongue rollers have more flexible muscle or connective tissue associated with the tongue. With the non-roller recessive trait (cc) a person only produce a slight downward curve of the tongue.

image1.png

Widow's Peak (D)

The widow's peak is a distinct downward point on the hairline at the top center of the forehead. This is a dominant trait. If you have a straight hairline, you have recessive alleles for this trait.

image2.png

Free or Attached Ear Lobe (E)

Look for where the lower earlobe attaches to the head - does it hang freely, more like a "U" (unattached), or curve directly into its attachment on the face, more like a "J" (attached)? Free earlobes are dominant over attached earlobes and are found in the majority of people.

Freckles (F)

Freckles are small, concentrated spots of the skin pigment melanin. This trait is probably due to a single gene called MC1R. The presence of freckles is dominant while the absence of freckles is recessive. Alleles of MC1R control freckle number; other genes and the environment influence freckle size, color, and pattern. For example, sun exposure can temporarily cause more freckles to appear.

Hitchhiker's Thumb (G)

When present, the thumb, held up, has almost a right angle bend on the outside and the pad is almost parallel to the ceiling. The ability to bend the thumb backward (at least 45o) is caused by a dominant allele. The proper term for this is distal hyperextensibility. People with dominant alleles have more flexible ligaments and thus looser joints.

image3.png

Finger Mid-digital Hair (H)

Some people have hair on the back of the middle segment of some fingers. Individuals with hair on the middle segment of at least one finger are considered to have the dominant trait mid-digital hair, while other people have no mid-digital hair (recessive). Lack of hair, however, can also be influenced by your environment - for example if you have a job where the hairs may be worn away.

Bent Little Finger (I)

In some people the fifth “little” finger bends towards the fourth finger near the tip. Bent fingers are believed to be dominant, while straight is recessive. There is limited evidence to support that the trait is controlled by one gene with two alleles.

Hair on Back of Hand (J)

Some people have hair on the back of their hands (dominant) while others have no hair (recessive).

Long Palmar Muscle (K)

Most people lack a forearm muscle (dominant) called the palmaris longus, which sends a tendon through the wrist into the hand. Approximately 14% of the population has this muscle (recessive). Make a tight fist, and tilt your hand toward you. If you see one obvious tendon down the middle, and can feel a tendon to either side of this middle tendon, the muscle is present. If you see (or feel) only two tendons, this muscle is absent. (Alternately, tightly press your opposing thumb and pinkie together to observe the tendons.)

Interlocking Fingers (L)

Fold your hands together by interlocking your fingers. If the left thumb is on top, you have the dominant allele. If the right thumb is on top you are homozygous recessive. This trait is not from a single gene but it acts like a dominant - recessive pair of alleles.

Morton’s Toe (M)

In some people, the big toe is longer than the second toe (recessive), while other people have the big toe shorter than the second toe (dominant). Whether the big toe is longer or shorter than the second toe is influenced by genetics, but it may be determined by more than one gene, or by a combination of genetics and the environment.

Handedness (N)

Recent discoveries make right-handedness dominant over no pre-determination – people with two recessives are about 50% left-handed. Handedness appears to be influenced by genetics, environment and chance.

Darwin Tubercle (O)

A Darwin tubercle is a projection on the upper portion (helix) of the ear resulting from a thickening of the cartilage. The tubercle may be inherited as a dominant, although some individuals may have the tubercle only on one ear and the size of the tubercle can vary. Absence of the tubercle may be recessive.

Inter-eye Distance (P)

Close-set eyes are incompletely dominant to eyes set far apart. Medium-set eyes are heterozygous.

Eye Color (Q)

Presence of pigment is usually dominant over absence of pigment in eye, hair and skin color. The actual color is a result of the interaction of several genes i.e. a polygenic trait. You can use two gene pairs to determine eye color. (This model is simplified since more than two genes are involved in eye pigmentation but using just two of them works pretty well.) One gene codes for pigment deposited in front of the iris; the other gene codes for pigment deposited behind the iris. Brown eyes are the result of black or brown pigment in the iris. Blue eyes have no pigment. Note that hazel or green eye color is the result of a second gene which produces a yellow pigment. Hazel eyes have brown iris pigment while green eyes have the recessive blue iris. (The alleles for Iris color are Q and q, and the alleles for the color behind the iris are Z and z.)

Phenotype

Genotype

Dark Brown

QQZZ and QQZz

Brown w/green flakes

QqZZ

Brown

QqZz and QQzz

hazel

Qqzz

green

qqZZ

Dark blue

qqZz

Pale Blue

qqzz

Hair Whorl (R)

When viewed from above and behind the head, many people's hair whorls in either a clockwise (dominant) or counterclockwise (recessive) direction. While this trait seems to be controlled by a single gene, there may be other genetic influences at play.

Report Page Name

Trait

Your phenotype

Your possible genotype

Mate’s genotype

One possible phenotype of offspring

A

Dimples A_

No Dimples aa

aa

B

Cleft Chin B_

No Cleft bb

BB

C

Tongue Roller C_

No Tongue Rolling cc

CC

D

Widow’s Peak D_

Straight Hairline dd

DD

E

Free Ear Lobe E_

Attached Ear Lobe ee

EE

F

Freckles F_

No freckles ff

FF

G

Hitchhiker’s Thumb G_

Normal Thumb gg

GG

H

Finger Mid-digital Hair H_

No Mid-digital Hair hh

hh

I

Bent Little Finger I_

Straight Little Finger ii

ii

J

Hair on Back of Hand J_

No Hair on Back of Hand jj

JJ

K

No Long Palmar Muscle K_

Long Palmar Muscle kk

KK

L

Interlock Left on top L_

Interlock Right on top ll

ll

M

Big Toe Shorter M_

Big Toe Longer mm

MM

N

Right Handed N_ or nn

Left Handed nn

NN

O

Darwin Tubercle O_

No Darwin Tubercle oo

OO

P

Close set eyes PP

Medium set eyes Pp

Wide set eyes pp

pp

Q, Z

Phenotype

Genotype

Dark Brown

QQZZ and QQZz

Brown w/green flakes

QqZZ

Brown

QqZz and QQzz

hazel

Qqzz

green

qqZZ

Dark blue

qqZz

Pale Blue

qqzz

Qqzz

R

Clockwise Whorl R_

Counterclockwise Whorl rr

RR

Homework is Completed By:

Writer Writer Name Amount Client Comments & Rating
Instant Homework Helper

ONLINE

Instant Homework Helper

$36

She helped me in last minute in a very reasonable price. She is a lifesaver, I got A+ grade in my homework, I will surely hire her again for my next assignments, Thumbs Up!

Order & Get This Solution Within 3 Hours in $25/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 3 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 6 Hours in $20/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 6 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 12 Hours in $15/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 12 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

6 writers have sent their proposals to do this homework:

WRITING LAND
Quality Homework Helper
Smart Tutor
Academic Mentor
Instant Homework Helper
Peter O.
Writer Writer Name Offer Chat
WRITING LAND

ONLINE

WRITING LAND

Being a Ph.D. in the Business field, I have been doing academic writing for the past 7 years and have a good command over writing research papers, essay, dissertations and all kinds of academic writing and proofreading.

$48 Chat With Writer
Quality Homework Helper

ONLINE

Quality Homework Helper

I am an elite class writer with more than 6 years of experience as an academic writer. I will provide you the 100 percent original and plagiarism-free content.

$24 Chat With Writer
Smart Tutor

ONLINE

Smart Tutor

I have worked on wide variety of research papers including; Analytical research paper, Argumentative research paper, Interpretative research, experimental research etc.

$27 Chat With Writer
Academic Mentor

ONLINE

Academic Mentor

I am a PhD writer with 10 years of experience. I will be delivering high-quality, plagiarism-free work to you in the minimum amount of time. Waiting for your message.

$27 Chat With Writer
Instant Homework Helper

ONLINE

Instant Homework Helper

As per my knowledge I can assist you in writing a perfect Planning, Marketing Research, Business Pitches, Business Proposals, Business Feasibility Reports and Content within your given deadline and budget.

$48 Chat With Writer
Peter O.

ONLINE

Peter O.

I am an experienced researcher here with master education. After reading your posting, I feel, you need an expert research writer to complete your project.Thank You

$40 Chat With Writer

Let our expert academic writers to help you in achieving a+ grades in your homework, assignment, quiz or exam.

Similar Homework Questions

Katherine laan muskoka obituary - Discussion 3 - Module 05 Scenario - Completing a Balance Sheet and Income Statement - Center of mass of a semicircular ring - Spellbound book 6 answers - Toyota prius target market - Gotham company purchased a new machine - Carroll and buchholtz 2009 - Managerial Accounting - Platonic heaven - Week 3 prewriting - Imagine a country holly sklar summary - Hair - Essay Guru ONLY - Dicussion 3 ( Business Ethics) - Precision interconnect sarasota fl - Todd matchett confessions of a young criminal - West coast transit case study - Residence letojanni half board - Eme definition south africa - Swinburne introduction to business information systems - The rain came grace ogot symbolism - Human resource quiz - Wilson electric battersea ltd - Running a thousand miles for freedom discussion questions - Uranium has two isotopes of masses - Single phase distribution transformer connections - Why is it best to have six or less life-cycle phases in an epm system - Telecommunications and Networking Assignment - Imhoff tank design calculation - We were liars movie - 12 point nut fastenal - Be specific natalie goldberg summary - 3 pin alternator wiring diagram - The beatles eleanor rigby lyrics - What is an analytic sandbox and why is it important - Why is if3 t shaped - Kiwi dna extraction lab - Ecological succession lab activity - Trade associations are responsible for all of the following except - Boehm incorporated is expected to pay - How to write reflection 1 for english sba - Welding electrode classifications table - Unit 6 Assessment - Your Job Search - Interpersonal communication movie analysis paper - The social work skills workbook cournoyer pdf - Punchline algebra book b 17.8 answers - Social media friend or foe by kara woodridge - Phet magnet and compass - Ceiling domes with lighting - Perception/Motivation - Organizational Behavior Post and Responses - Cs111 wellesley - Responding - A secondary analysis of data - Full time teacher hours - Deed of partition nsw - One word from god can change your finances pdf - Mckesson hr department - Bartels corp.produces wood carvings - BUS 660 WEEK 1 ASSIGNMENT - 500 words minimum assignment - Seismograph lab answer key - Wheels within wheels the crucible - Closest tnt local exchange - Annotated Bibliography 3 - Loch sloy hydro electric scheme - Few paragraphs - Interdependency between various segments of the hospitality industry means - How using social media affects teenagers rachel ehmke - HW - Child bankrupts make a wish foundation - English - Simulation bizcafe - Math1081 lab test 1 - ENG 225 Introduction to Film NO PLAGIARISM PLZ - Draft #2 research paper - I don t need no doctor solo tab - HRM 652 EVALUATING RESULTS AND BENEFITS - Lcm of monomials worksheet - Dnv 2.7 1 padeye calculation - 34 54 poplar road parkville - Speedy delivery systems can buy a piece - Ruth duckworth clouds over lake michigan - Nursing - Woolworths ceo brad banducci - Name of eight english kings - The wife of bath's tale quotes in modern english - Two assignments due tonight before 11:59 - The bustle in the house poem analysis - Questions - Introduction to leadership peter g northouse pdf - Kedron brook wetlands reserve - Bunn my cafe k cup drawer leaking - How to solve process costing problems - DISCUSSION ON BELOW TOPICS - How many chapters in lotf - Powerpoint on polygons and quadrilaterals - How to calculate labour productivity per hour - Record sliding door manual - Coca cola balanced scorecard