Unit IV Genetics
Unit IV Genetics
Unit IV Genetics
Genetics is the branch of biology that deals with the study of heredity
and its biological process. It also involves the study of genes, genomes
and the cell cycle.
Genetics is termed as the study to understand the functioning of
inheritance of traits from parents to offspring.
The groundwork on which heredity stands is known as inheritance. It
is defined as the procedure by which characteristics are handed down
from one generation to the other.
Gregor Johann Mendel is known as the “Father of Modern Genetics”
for his discoveries on the basic principles of heredity.
Inheritance is the acquiring of genetic characteristics or traits from
parents by their offspring.
GENETIC CODES
How is the information in a gene encoded? The answer is
the genetic code.
The genetic code can be defined as the set of certain
rules using which the living cells translate the
information encoded within genetic material (DNA or
mRNA sequences).
The ribosomes are responsible to accomplish the process
of translation. They link the amino acids in an mRNA-
specified (messenger RNA) order using tRNA (transfer
RNA ) molecules to carry amino acids and to read the
mRNA three nucleotides at a time.
The genetic code consists of the sequence of nitrogen
bases—A(adenine), C(cytosine), G(guanine), U(uracil)
—in an mRNA chain.
The four bases make up the “letters” of the genetic code.