Understandings:
- A gene is a heritable factor that consists of a length of DNA and influences a specific characteristic.
- A gene occupies a specific position on a chromosome.
- The various specific forms of a gene are alleles.
- Alleles differ from each other by one or only a few bases.
- New alleles are formed by mutation.
- The genome is the whole of the genetic information of an organism.
- The entire base sequence of human genes was sequenced in the Human Genome Project.
Applications and skills:
- Application: The causes of sickle cell anemia, including a base substitution mutation, a change to the base sequence of mRNA transcribed from it and a change to the sequence of a polypeptide in hemoglobin.
- Application: Comparison of the number of genes in humans with other species.
- Skill: Use of a database to determine differences in the base sequence of a gene in two species.
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International-mindedness:
- Sequencing of the human genome shows that all humans share the vast majority of their base sequences but also that there are many single nucleotide polymorphisms that contribute to human diversity.
Theory of knowledge:
- There is a link between sickle cell anemia and prevalence of malaria. How can we know whether there is a causal link in such cases or simply a correlation?
Aims:
- Aim 7: The use of a database to compare DNA base sequences.
- Aim 8: Ethics of patenting human genes.
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