Mel122 Posted June 20 Posted June 20 (edited) I am a high school student currently studying Mendelian genetics. I stumbled upon a question that said two plants with the genotypes PpQq each are selfed, resulting in the formation of 1000 seeds. The question then asks to find the frequencies of the following genotypes: Ppqq, PpQq, ppQq and PpQQ To solve this, I found the ratio (2:4:2:2), divided each by 16 and multiplied by 1000 to find the exact number of each progeny. This is probably a very basic and silly doubt, but I'm confused. I get that the probability of, say, 'Ppqq' is 2/16, but why do we have to multiply that by 1000? Can someone explain the right way to do this problem? Thanks. Edited June 20 by Mel122
Hysda Posted June 21 Posted June 21 To determine the frequencies of the genotypes, you first find their probabilities from the Punnett square (e.g., 2/16 for Ppqq). Multiplying by 1000, the total number of seeds, converts these probabilities into actual counts. For example, (2/16) * 1000 = 125 seeds with the Ppqq genotype. This approach ensures you have the correct number of seeds for each genotype, reflecting their expected proportions in a large sample.
Agent Smith Posted July 22 Posted July 22 (edited) 2 sets of genes, recessive/dominant. Original parent gene sets PpQq (both male and female plants have the same genotype) Possibilities: 1. PP, Pp, pP, pp, 4 genotypes 2. QQ, Qq, qQ, qq, 4 genotypes Total combinations possible = 4 * 4 = 16 genotypes For Ppqq there are 2 combinations: Ppqq and pPqq For PpQq there are 4 combinations: PpQq, PpqQ, pPQq, pPqQ For ppQq there are 2 combinations: ppQq, ppqQ For PpQQ there are 2 combinations: PpQQ, pPQQ Frequency of Ppqq = 2/16 Frequency of PpQq = 4/16 Frequency of ppQQ = 2/16 Frequency of PpQQ = 2/16 The answer to your question, why do we multiply by 1000, is hinted to by the word "frequency". The frequency of Ppqq for example is 2 in 16. What's the frequency of Ppqq in 1000? If it rains 3 times in every 15 days, how many times will it rain in 60 days? Edited July 22 by Agent Smith
Mel122 Posted August 10 Author Posted August 10 On 7/22/2024 at 3:16 PM, Agent Smith said: The answer to your question, why do we multiply by 1000, is hinted to by the word "frequency". The frequency of Ppqq for example is 2 in 16. What's the frequency of Ppqq in 1000? If it rains 3 times in every 15 days, how many times will it rain in 60 days? Thanks for the example, I get it now. 1
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