Introduction to Genetic Analysis
Introduction to Genetic Analysis
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781464109485
Author: Anthony J.F. Griffiths, Susan R. Wessler, Sean B. Carroll, John Doebley
Publisher: W. H. Freeman
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Chapter 2, Problem 59P
Summary Introduction

To determine: The ratio of normal to small-winged flies that can be expected in F1 if those are intercrossed, F2 progeny ratios that are expected, and also explain progeny ratios that are predicted if F1 females are backcrossed with their father.

Introduction: Drosophila is a genus of flies that belong to the family Drosophilidae, and their members are usually called "small fruit flies" or pomace flies, vinegar flies, or wine flies, a mention to the quality of various species to stay throughout overripe or rotting fruit.

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The recessive allele s causes Drosophila to have small wings, and the s+ allele causes normal wings. This gene is known to be X linked. If a small-winged male is crossed with a homozygous wild-type female, what ratio of normal to small-winged flies can be expected in each sex in the F1? If F1 flies are intercrossed, what F2 progeny ratios are expected? What progeny ratios are predicted if F1 females are backcrossed with their father?
In Drosophila melanogaster, cinnabar eye (cn) and vestigial wing (vg) are simple recessive traits. A pure breeding cinnabar fly is crossed with a pure breeding vestigial wing fly and have offspring that are all wild type. If the genes are closely linked and no crossing over is found to occur, then what would the F2 offspring phenotypes be when testcrossed? O 1/2 wild type and 1/2 double mutant 1/2 cinnabar and 1/2 vesitigial wing O all wild type O 1/4 wild type, 1/4 cinnabar, 1/4 vestigial and 1/4 double mutant
In Drosophila, singed bristles (sn) and cut wings (ct) are both caused by recessive, X-linked alleles. The wild type alleles (sn+ and ct+) are responsible for straight bristles and intact wings, respectively. A female homozygous for sn+ and ct+ is crossed to a sn ct male. The F1 flies are interbred. The F2 males are distributed as follows  sn ct 36 sn ct+ 13 sn+ ct 12 sn+ ct+ 39 What is the map distance between sn and ct?

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Introduction to Genetic Analysis

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