Sunday, July 5, 2026

Terminology Related to Genetics

 



Terminology Related to Genetics

Introduction

Genetics is one of the most important branches of Biology and forms a significant portion of the syllabus. A clear understanding of genetic terminology is essential before studying topics such as Mendelian inheritance, chromosomal theory of inheritance, linkage, recombination, mutations, sex determination, pedigree analysis, molecular genetics, biotechnology, and evolution.

What Is Genetics?

Genetics

Definition

Genetics is the branch of biology that deals with:

  • Heredity
  • Inheritance
  • Variation
  • Genes
  • Chromosomes
  • DNA
  • Genetic disorders

The term Genetics was coined by William Bateson in 1905.

Heredity

Definition

Heredity is the transmission of hereditary characteristics from parents to offspring through genes.

It ensures continuity of species from one generation to the next.

Inheritance

Definition

Inheritance is the biological process by which hereditary traits are transmitted from parents to offspring through genes located on chromosomes.

Variation

Definition

Variation refers to differences in characteristics among individuals of the same species. Variation is essential because it provides the raw material for evolution.

Examples

  • Height
  • Blood group
  • Eye colour
  • Skin colour

Character

Definition

A character is any heritable feature of an organism that can exist in different forms.

Example

Character: Plant height

Forms (Traits):

  • Tall
  • Dwarf

Trait

Definition

A trait is a particular expression or form of a character.

Examples Character → Flower colour

Traits:

  • Purple
  • White

Character → Seed shape

Traits:

  • Round
  • Wrinkled

Gene

The term Gene was introduced by Wilhelm Johannsen in 1909.

Definition

A gene is the basic structural and functional unit of heredity. It is a segment of DNA that carries the information required to produce a specific protein or functional RNA and thereby influences a particular trait.

Functions

  • Controls inheritance
  • Directs protein synthesis
  • Determines phenotype
  • Undergoes mutation
  • Replicates during cell division

Allele

Definition

Alleles are alternative forms of the same gene occupying the same locus on homologous chromosomes.

Example

Gene: Plant height

Alleles:

T = Tall

t = Dwarf

Allelomorphs

Alleles were originally called allelomorphs. Today, the term allele is universally used.

Locus

Definition

The specific position occupied by a gene on a chromosome is called its locus. Each gene occupies a fixed position.

Chromosome

Definition

Chromosomes are thread-like DNA-protein structures present in the nucleus that carry genes and transmit hereditary information.

Human Chromosomes

Total: 46, Organized as:

  • 22 pairs of autosomes
  • 1 pair of sex chromosomes

Homologous Chromosomes

Definition

A pair of chromosomes having:

  • Same size
  • Same shape
  • Same gene arrangement
  • Same loci

One chromosome is inherited from each parent.

Autosomes

Definition

Chromosomes that do not determine Gender.

Humans possess: 22 pairs, Total: 44 autosomes

Sex Chromosomes

Definition

Chromosomes involved in determining sex i,e, gender of offsprings.

Humans possess: One pair, Female: XX, Male: XY

DNA

Definition

Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) is the hereditary material of almost all living organisms.

Functions

  • Stores genetic information
  • Replicates before cell division
  • Controls protein synthesis
  • Transfers hereditary information

Genome

Definition

The complete set of genetic material (DNA) present in an organism. Human genome contains approximately: 3.2 billion base pairs.

Genotype

Definition

The genetic constitution or genetic makeup of an organism.

Examples

TT, Tt, tt

Phenotype

Definition

The observable characteristics of an organism.

Examples

  • Tall plant
  • Brown eyes
  • White flower

Phenotype depends upon:

Genotype + Environment

Dominant Allele

Definition

An allele that expresses itself in both homozygous and heterozygous conditions.

Represented by: Capital letter, Example: T

Recessive Allele

Definition

An allele expressed only in homozygous condition.

Represented by: Small letter, Example: t

Homozygous

Definition

An individual possessing two identical alleles for a gene.

Examples- TT, tt

Also called: Pure

Heterozygous

Definition

An individual possessing two different alleles for a gene.

Example- Tt

Also called: Hybrid

Pure Line

Definition

A genetically uniform line produced through continuous self-fertilization. Produces identical offspring generation after generation.

Hybrid

Definition

An offspring produced by crossing genetically different parents.

Example

TT × tt

Tt

Parental Generation (P)

The original parents used in a genetic cross. Represented as: P

Filial Generation

F₁ Generation

First generation offspring obtained from parental cross.

F₂ Generation

Second generation obtained by selfing or intercrossing F₁ individuals.

Monohybrid Cross

Definition

A genetic cross involving only one character.

Example- Tall × Dwarf

Dihybrid Cross

Definition

A cross involving two different characters simultaneously.

Example- Seed shape and seed colour.

Test Cross

Definition

Cross between: Unknown genotype × Homozygous recessive

Purpose: To determine genotype.

Back Cross

Definition

Cross between: F₁ hybrid × Either parent

Test cross is a special type of back cross.

Gamete

Definition

A haploid reproductive cell produced by meiosis.

Examples

  • Sperm
  • Ovum
  • Pollen
  • Egg

Contains one allele of every gene.

Zygote

Definition

Diploid cell formed by fusion of two gametes. Undergoes mitosis to develop into embryo.

Haploid

Definition

Cells containing one complete set of chromosomes.

Represented as: n

Example- Human sperm: 23 chromosomes

Diploid

Definition

Cells containing two complete chromosome sets.

Represented as: 2n

Example- Human somatic cells: 46 chromosomes

Pure Breeding

Individuals that produce offspring identical to themselves after repeated self-fertilization. Usually homozygous.

Punnett Square

Definition

A diagram used to predict possible genotypes and phenotypes of offspring. Developed by Reginald Crundall Punnett.

Probability

The mathematical chance of occurrence of an event.Widely used in genetics.

Example

Probability of obtaining TT from Tt × Tt = 1/4

Pedigree

Definition

A diagram showing inheritance of traits over several generations of a family. Used extensively in medical genetics.

Carrier

Definition

A heterozygous individual carrying one recessive disease allele without showing symptoms.

Example- Carrier female for Hemophilia.

Mutation

Definition

A sudden, permanent, heritable change in DNA or chromosome structure. Mutation is the ultimate source of new genetic variation.

Mutagen

Definition

Any agent capable of causing mutations.

Examples

Physical:

  • X-rays
  • Gamma rays
  • UV rays

Chemical:

  • Nitrous acid
  • Mustard gas

Biological:

  • Certain viruses

LINKAGE

Definition

The tendency of genes located on the same chromosome to be inherited together.

Recombination

Definition

Formation of new gene combinations during meiosis due to crossing over and independent assortment. Produces genetic diversity.

Crossing Over

Definition

Exchange of chromosome segments between homologous chromosomes.

Occurs during: Pachytene stage of Prophase I of meiosis.

Gene Pool

Definition

The total collection of all genes and alleles present in a population. Evolution changes gene pool composition.

Allele Frequency

Definition

Proportion of a particular allele present in a population. Evolution is measured by changes in allele frequencies.

Penetrance

Definition

The proportion of individuals with a particular genotype who actually express the associated phenotype.

       i.          Complete penetrance = all individuals express the trait.

     ii.          Incomplete penetrance = some individuals do not express the trait despite carrying the genotype.

Expressivity

Definition

The degree or intensity with which a genotype is expressed in different individuals.

Example: Individuals with the same genetic disorder may show mild or severe symptoms.

Pleiotropy

Definition

A single gene influencing multiple different phenotypic traits.

Example: The gene responsible for Sickle Cell Disease affects red blood cell shape, anemia, pain crises, and susceptibility to infections.

Polygenic Inheritance

Definition

Inheritance of a single character controlled by two or more genes.

Examples

  • Human skin colour
  • Human height

Multiple Alleles

Definition

More than two alternative forms of a gene existing in a population.

Example- ABO blood group system: IA, IB, i

Codominance

Definition

Both alleles express themselves equally in heterozygous condition.

Example- Blood group AB.

Incomplete Dominance

Definition

Neither allele completely dominates the other.

Example- Pink flowers in snapdragon plants.

Epitasis

Definition

Interaction in which one gene masks or modifies the expression of another non-allelic gene.

Atavism

Definition

Reappearance of an ancestral trait in modern individuals.

Example- Rare occurrence of a tail-like structure in humans.

Hereditary Disease

Definition

Disease transmitted genetically from parents to offspring.

Examples

  • Hemophilia
  • Sickle Cell Disease
  • Thalassemia

Congenital Disorder

Definition

A disorder present at birth.

May be:

  • Genetic
  • Environmental
  • Multifactorial

Genetic Disorder

Definition

Disease caused by abnormalities in genes or chromosomes.

Examples

  • Down syndrome
  • Turner syndrome
  • Klinefelter syndrome

SUMMARY TABLE

Term

Definition

Genetics

Study of heredity and variation

Heredity

Transmission of traits

Inheritance

Mechanism of transmission

Character

General heritable feature

Trait

Particular form of a character

Gene

Basic unit of heredity

Allele

Alternative form of a gene

Locus

Position of a gene

Genotype

Genetic constitution

Phenotype

Observable expression

Homozygous

Same alleles

Heterozygous

Different alleles

Dominant

Expressed in heterozygous state

Recessive

Expressed only in homozygous state

Gamete

Haploid reproductive cell

Zygote

Diploid cell formed after fertilization

Mutation

Heritable change in DNA

Recombination

New gene combinations

Linkage

Genes inherited together

Genome

Complete genetic material

Gene Pool

Total genes in a population