Genetics & Body Systems
Understand how traits are inherited through DNA, genes, and alleles. Explore how the body generates energy through respiration and how the circulatory and respiratory systems work together to sustain life.
What You'll Learn
- Describe the structure and function of DNA, genes, and chromosomes
- Distinguish between dominant and recessive alleles, genotype and phenotype
- Use Punnett squares to predict offspring genotype and phenotype ratios
- Compare aerobic and anaerobic respiration with word and symbol equations
- Explain how the circulatory and respiratory systems deliver oxygen and remove waste
- Link cellular respiration to energy demands of the body
IB Assessment Focus
Criterion A — Knowing: Define key genetic terms and state respiration equations accurately.
Criterion B — Inquiring: Design experiments to test inheritance patterns; form testable hypotheses.
Criterion C — Processing: Construct and interpret Punnett squares; analyse respiration data.
Criterion D — Reflecting: Discuss ethical implications of genetic technologies; evaluate real-world applications.
Key Vocabulary
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| DNA | Deoxyribonucleic acid — a double-helix molecule that carries all genetic instructions in living organisms |
| Gene | A segment of DNA that codes for a specific protein or trait |
| Chromosome | A structure of tightly coiled DNA found in the cell nucleus; humans have 46 (23 pairs) |
| Allele | A version (variant) of a gene; each individual inherits two alleles for each gene, one from each parent |
| Dominant allele | The version of a gene expressed whenever present (written in capital letters, e.g. T) |
| Recessive allele | The version expressed only when two copies are present — homozygous recessive (lowercase, e.g. t) |
| Genotype | The genetic makeup of an organism (e.g. TT, Tt, tt) |
| Phenotype | The observable physical characteristic (e.g. tall, short, brown eyes) |
| Homozygous | Having two identical alleles for a gene (TT or tt) |
| Heterozygous | Having two different alleles for a gene (Tt) — also called a "carrier" for the recessive trait |
DNA & Chromosomes
DNA is the molecule of inheritance. Its structure determines how genetic information is stored, copied, and passed from parent to offspring.
The Structure of DNA
DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. It is shaped like a twisted ladder, called a double helix. The two long strands form the "sides" of the ladder, while the "rungs" are made of pairs of chemical bases.
The Four Bases
DNA contains four nitrogenous bases that pair in a specific way:
- Adenine (A) always pairs with Thymine (T)
- Cytosine (C) always pairs with Guanine (G)
This is called complementary base pairing. The bases are held together by hydrogen bonds. If you know the sequence on one strand, you can work out the other.
T-A-G-C-C-T
From DNA to Chromosomes
The hierarchy of genetic organisation is:
- Base pairs → form the rungs of the DNA double helix
- Genes → sections of DNA that code for a specific protein (typically hundreds to thousands of base pairs long)
- Chromosomes → long, tightly coiled structures of DNA; each chromosome contains many genes
- Genome → the complete set of all DNA in an organism
Human Chromosomes
Human body cells contain 46 chromosomes, arranged in 23 pairs. One chromosome in each pair comes from the mother and one from the father.
| Cell Type | Number of Chromosomes | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Body cells (somatic) | 46 (23 pairs) — diploid | Contain the full set; formed by mitosis |
| Sex cells (gametes) | 23 (half) — haploid | Egg and sperm; formed by meiosis |
When a sperm (23) fertilises an egg (23), the resulting zygote has 46 chromosomes — a full set. The 23rd pair determines biological sex: XX = female, XY = male.
Inheritance & Punnett Squares
Genetics follows predictable patterns. Punnett squares allow us to predict the probability of offspring inheriting specific traits.
Alleles and Inheritance
For every gene, an organism inherits two alleles — one from each parent. These alleles can be:
| Genotype | Type | Phenotype Expressed |
|---|---|---|
| TT | Homozygous dominant | Dominant trait (e.g. tall) |
| Tt | Heterozygous | Dominant trait (e.g. tall) — the dominant allele "masks" the recessive |
| tt | Homozygous recessive | Recessive trait (e.g. short) |
How to Construct a Punnett Square
A Punnett square is a grid used to predict the probability of offspring genotypes and phenotypes from a genetic cross.
- Identify the parents' genotypes (e.g. Tt × Tt)
- Write each parent's alleles along the top and side of a 2×2 grid
- Fill in each box by combining the alleles from the row and column
- Count the genotypes to determine ratios
- Determine phenotypes from the genotypes
Example: Monohybrid Cross (Tt × Tt)
Two heterozygous tall pea plants are crossed. T = tall (dominant), t = short (recessive).
| T | t | |
|---|---|---|
| T | TT | Tt |
| t | Tt | tt |
- Genotype ratio: 1 TT : 2 Tt : 1 tt
- Phenotype ratio: 3 tall : 1 short (75% tall, 25% short)
- Probability of a tall offspring = 3/4 = 75%
- Probability of a short offspring = 1/4 = 25%
Example: Test Cross (Tt × tt)
A test cross is used to determine whether an organism showing the dominant trait is homozygous (TT) or heterozygous (Tt). Cross the unknown with a homozygous recessive (tt).
| T | t | |
|---|---|---|
| t | Tt | tt |
| t | Tt | tt |
- Genotype ratio: 1 Tt : 1 tt
- Phenotype ratio: 1 tall : 1 short (50% : 50%)
- If ANY recessive offspring appear, the unknown parent must be heterozygous (Tt)
Co-dominance (Extension)
In some cases, neither allele is fully dominant. When both alleles are expressed equally, this is called co-dominance. For example, in some flower species, a cross between red (RRRR) and white (RWRW) produces pink flowers (RRRW) — both alleles contribute to the phenotype.
Cellular Respiration
Respiration is the process by which cells release energy from glucose. It happens in every living cell, all the time — it is NOT the same as breathing.
Aerobic Respiration
Aerobic respiration uses oxygen to break down glucose completely, releasing a large amount of energy. It occurs in the mitochondria of cells.
- Requires oxygen
- Occurs in the mitochondria
- Produces approximately 30–32 ATP per glucose molecule (high energy yield)
- Products: carbon dioxide and water (waste products expelled by breathing and excretion)
- This is the body's preferred method of energy production
Anaerobic Respiration
Anaerobic respiration occurs when oxygen is insufficient or absent. It takes place in the cytoplasm and releases much less energy.
| Feature | In Animals | In Yeast (Fermentation) |
|---|---|---|
| Equation | Glucose → Lactic acid + Energy | Glucose → Ethanol + Carbon dioxide + Energy |
| Products | Lactic acid (causes muscle fatigue and cramp) | Ethanol (alcohol) + CO2 |
| Energy yield | Low (2 ATP) | Low (2 ATP) |
| Uses | Intense exercise (sprinting) | Bread-making (CO2 makes dough rise), brewing |
Comparison Table
| Feature | Aerobic | Anaerobic |
|---|---|---|
| Oxygen required? | Yes | No |
| Location | Mitochondria | Cytoplasm |
| Energy yield | High (~30–32 ATP) | Low (2 ATP) |
| Products | CO2 + Water | Lactic acid (animals) or Ethanol + CO2 (yeast) |
| Glucose breakdown | Complete | Incomplete (energy still trapped in products) |
| When used | Normal activity; resting | Intense exercise; low oxygen conditions |
Oxygen Debt
After intense exercise, you continue to breathe heavily. This is to repay the oxygen debt — the extra oxygen needed to break down the lactic acid that accumulated during anaerobic respiration. The lactic acid is transported in the blood to the liver, where it is converted back to glucose.
Circulatory & Respiratory Systems
The circulatory and respiratory systems work together to deliver oxygen to cells and remove carbon dioxide — supporting the continuous process of cellular respiration.
The Respiratory System
The respiratory system is responsible for gas exchange — getting oxygen into the blood and removing carbon dioxide.
- Nose/mouth → air is warmed, moistened, and filtered
- Trachea (windpipe) → supported by C-shaped cartilage rings
- Bronchi → two tubes branching into each lung
- Bronchioles → smaller branches within the lungs
- Alveoli → tiny air sacs where gas exchange occurs
Gas Exchange in the Alveoli
The alveoli are adapted for efficient gas exchange:
| Adaptation | How It Helps |
|---|---|
| Large surface area (millions of alveoli) | More space for gas exchange to occur |
| Very thin walls (one cell thick) | Short diffusion distance for gases |
| Rich blood supply (dense capillary network) | Maintains a steep concentration gradient |
| Moist lining | Gases dissolve before diffusing across |
Oxygen diffuses from the alveoli (high concentration) into the blood capillaries (low concentration). Carbon dioxide diffuses the opposite way — from blood into the alveoli, then is exhaled.
The Circulatory System
The circulatory system transports substances around the body. Humans have a double circulatory system — blood passes through the heart twice per complete circuit.
- Pulmonary circuit: Heart → Lungs → Heart (picks up oxygen, releases CO2)
- Systemic circuit: Heart → Body → Heart (delivers oxygen to cells, collects CO2)
The Heart
The heart has four chambers:
| Chamber | Function |
|---|---|
| Right atrium | Receives deoxygenated blood from the body (via vena cava) |
| Right ventricle | Pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs (via pulmonary artery) |
| Left atrium | Receives oxygenated blood from the lungs (via pulmonary vein) |
| Left ventricle | Pumps oxygenated blood to the whole body (via aorta) — has the thickest muscular wall |
Blood Vessels
| Vessel | Structure | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Arteries | Thick, muscular, elastic walls; small lumen | Carry blood AWAY from the heart at high pressure |
| Veins | Thinner walls; larger lumen; contain valves | Carry blood TOWARD the heart at low pressure; valves prevent backflow |
| Capillaries | One cell thick; tiny | Where exchange of substances occurs between blood and tissues |
Components of Blood
| Component | Function |
|---|---|
| Red blood cells | Contain haemoglobin; transport oxygen; no nucleus (more room for haemoglobin); biconcave shape increases surface area |
| White blood cells | Fight infection (phagocytes engulf pathogens; lymphocytes produce antibodies) |
| Platelets | Cell fragments that help blood clot at wound sites |
| Plasma | Yellow liquid; transports dissolved substances (glucose, CO2, urea, hormones, antibodies) |
Worked Examples
These examples demonstrate the kind of structured reasoning expected in IB MYP Sciences. Use the word "because" to connect observations to explanations.
Step 2: Draw the Punnett square:
| B | b
B | BB | Bb
b | Bb | bb
Step 3: Count genotypes: 1 BB : 2 Bb : 1 bb
Step 4: Only bb shows blue eyes (homozygous recessive).
Answer: Probability = 1/4 = 25%
Explanation: Blue eyes only appear when both alleles are recessive (bb), because the dominant allele B masks the recessive allele b in heterozygous (Bb) individuals.
A pairs with T, T pairs with A, G pairs with C, C pairs with G.
Original: A - T - G - C - C - A
Complement: T - A - C - G - G - T
Justification: DNA uses complementary base pairing (A-T and C-G) because of the specific hydrogen bonding between these base pairs. Adenine and thymine form 2 hydrogen bonds; cytosine and guanine form 3 hydrogen bonds.
After the race: The sprinter breathes heavily to take in extra oxygen. This oxygen is used to break down the accumulated lactic acid in the liver — converting it back to glucose. The extra oxygen required is called the oxygen debt.
Key link: Heavy breathing occurs because the body needs to repay the oxygen debt, and the increased breathing rate ensures more oxygen reaches the blood and is delivered to the liver to process lactic acid.
Therefore, the left ventricle has a thicker muscular wall because it needs to generate greater force to contract more powerfully and maintain higher blood pressure for the systemic circuit.
1. Large surface area: There are millions of alveoli, providing a huge total surface area for gas exchange to occur across.
2. Thin walls: Alveoli walls are only one cell thick, minimising the diffusion distance so gases can cross quickly.
3. Rich blood supply: A dense network of capillaries surrounds each alveolus, maintaining a steep concentration gradient — oxygen-rich air in the alveolus and oxygen-poor blood in the capillary.
4. Moist lining: The thin layer of moisture allows gases to dissolve before diffusing across the membrane.
All these features maximise the rate of diffusion of oxygen into the blood and carbon dioxide out of the blood.
Practice Q&A
Attempt each question before revealing the model answer. Focus on using "because" to connect your observations to explanations.
All offspring are Tt (heterozygous).
Genotype ratio: 100% Tt
Phenotype ratio: 100% tall
All offspring show the dominant phenotype because every individual has at least one dominant allele (T), which masks the recessive allele (t).
Veins carry blood toward the heart at low pressure. They have thinner walls, a larger lumen, and contain valves to prevent the backflow of blood.
Both are blood vessels that form part of the circulatory system, but their structural differences reflect the different pressures at which they operate.
2. It passes through the bronchi into the bronchioles, and reaches the alveoli.
3. Oxygen diffuses across the thin alveolar wall into the blood capillaries (down the concentration gradient).
4. Oxygen binds to haemoglobin in red blood cells, forming oxyhaemoglobin.
5. The oxygenated blood returns to the heart via the pulmonary vein, enters the left atrium, then left ventricle.
6. The heart pumps the blood through arteries to the muscles.
7. At the muscle capillaries, oxygen dissociates from haemoglobin and diffuses into the muscle cells.
8. In the mitochondria of the muscle cell, oxygen is used in aerobic respiration to release energy.
Flashcard Review
Tap each card to reveal the answer. Try to answer from memory first.