I am finding Blueprint of Life Topics 3, 4 and 5 extremely difficult to understand. Stuck on these two dotpoints at the moment.
explain the role of gamete formation and sexual reproduction in variability of offspring
describe the inheritance of sex-linked genes, and alleles that exhibit co-dominance and explain why these do not produce simple Mendelian ratios
explain the role of gamete formation and sexual reproduction in variability of offspring:
Gamete formation = meiosis > how does meiosis create variety in genes?? 2 things, random segregation, and crossing over. 2 things you should know and should be in any good set of notes.
Sexual reproduction creates variety due to fertilisation of gametes being random. I.e. the two gametes are randomly drawn rom the huge group of gamete possibilities from each parent due to the variety created in meiosis.
describe the inheritance of sex-linked genes, and alleles that exhibit co-dominance and explain why these do not produce simple Mendelian ratios:
Here it requires you to know what sex-linked genes are and how they are inherited, same for co-dominant alleles.
Sex-linked genes are carried on the sex chromosomes. Remember males have XY sex chromosomes (1 x chromosome), females have XX sex chromosomes (2 x chromosomes).
Co-dominance is where two alleles are dominant, so both are expressed in the phenotype. Imagine a chicken, parent 1 is black, parent 2 is white, offspring is black and white (e.g. spotted/speckled).
Both these do not produce Mendelian ratios because Mendel did not account for sex-linked genes or co-dominance, and only tested dominance and recessiveness in his pea plants (someone else could word this better probably).
Let me know if out of this you don't understand something specifically, I'll try and explain.