All
Research
Education
Business
Solutions
EN
EN - English
CN - 中文
DE - Deutsch
ES - Español
KR - 한국어
IT - Italiano
FR - Français
PT - Português
TR - Türkçe
JA - 日本語
PL - Polski
RU - Русский
HE - עִברִית
AR - العربية
Sign In
Chapter 12
Overview A Punnett square displays the possible genotypes offspring can inherit from two parental genotypes. If a trait’s inheritance pattern ...
Overview In the 1850s and 1860s, Gregor Mendel investigated inheritance by performing monohybrid crosses in pea plants. He crossed two plants that were ...
Overview To determine whether traits are inherited together or separately, Gregor Mendel crossed pea plants that differed in two traits. These parental ...
Trihybrid Crosses Some of Mendel’s crosses examined three pairs of contrasting characteristics. Such a cross is called a trihybrid cross. A ...
While Mendel’s Law of Segregation states that the two alleles for one gene are separated into different gametes, a different question of how ...
The chi-square test is a statistical hypothesis test. It is used to check whether there is a significant difference between an expected value and an ...
Overview A pedigree is a diagram displaying a family’s history of a trait. Analyzing pedigrees can reveal (1) whether a trait is dominant or ...
The Concept of Multiple Allelism Multiple allelism describes genes that exist in three or more allelic forms. Although diploid organisms, like humans, ...
Gregor Mendel's work (1822 - 1884) was primarily focused on pea plants. Through his initial experiments, he determined that every gene in a diploid ...
Agouti: A Lethal Allele Lucien Cuénot discovered lethal alleles in 1905 while studying the inheritance of coat color in mice. The agouti gene is ...
When more than one gene is responsible for a given phenotype, the trait is considered polygenic. Human height is a polygenic trait. Studies have uncovered ...
Although the genetic makeup of an organism plays a major role in determining the phenotype, there are also several environmental factors, such as ...
Among mammals, the gender of an organism is determined by the sex chromosomes. Humans have two sex chromosomes, X and Y. Every human diploid cell has 22 ...
The Y chromosome is a sex chromosome found in several vertebrates and mammals, including humans. In addition to 22 pairs of autosomes, the human ...
In most organisms, sex is determined by the ratio of X and Y chromosomes. However, in some organisms, such as Drosophila and C.elegans, sex is determined ...
In most mammalian species, females have two X sex chromosomes and males have an X and Y. As a result, mutations on the X chromosome in females may be ...
Like autosomes, sex chromosomes contain a variety of genes necessary for normal body function. When a mutation in one of these genes results in biological ...
In animals, gender is determined by the number and type of sex chromosome. For example, human females have two X chromosomes, and males have one X and one ...
The human X chromosome contains over ten times the number of genes as in the Y chromosome. Since males have only one X chromosome, and females have two, ...
Human blood is classified into different types based on the presence of antigens on the red blood cell's surface and antibodies in the plasma. Proper ...
Blood transfusion is a therapeutic measure to restore the blood volume after extensive blood loss due to an accident or a medical procedure. Blood ...
Privacy
Terms of Use
Policies
Contact Us
Recommend to library
JoVE NEWSLETTERS
JoVE Journal
Methods Collections
JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
Archive
JoVE Core
JoVE Science Education
JoVE Lab Manual
JoVE Quiz
JoVE Playlist
Authors
Librarians
Access
ABOUT JoVE
JoVE Sitemap
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved