Step 1: Understand the meaning of a zygote.
A zygote is a eukaryotic cell formed by the fertilization of an egg and a sperm cell. It's a single-cell embryo that will eventually develop into a multicellular organism.
Step 2: Know the methods used to introduce DNA into a zygote.
Microinjection: A fine glass needle is used to directly inject DNA into the zygote. This is a common and precise method used in genetic engineering of animals.
Electroporation: High-voltage electrical pulses create pores in the cell membrane of the zygote, allowing DNA to enter. It is effective in making cells temporarily permeable.
Transduction: Involves the use of viruses to deliver foreign DNA into a host cell. Modified viruses can be used to introduce DNA into eukaryotic zygotes.
Step 3: Understand why conjugation is not applicable.
Conjugation is a natural gene transfer process seen in prokaryotes (like bacteria), where DNA is transferred through a pilus between two bacterial cells.
It is not used and not possible for transferring DNA into a eukaryotic zygote because conjugation mechanisms do not exist in eukaryotic systems. Step 4: Conclude based on the above facts.
All the first three techniques (Microinjection, Electroporation, Transduction) are artificial and suitable for zygotes. Conjugation is strictly bacterial and irrelevant to genetic manipulation of zygotes.
Pure-tall (TT) pea plants are crossed with pure-dwarf (tt) pea plants. The pea plants obtained in F1 generation are then self-pollinated to produce F2 generation.
(i) What do the plants of F1 generation look like? Justify your answer.
(ii) What is the ratio of pure-tall plants to pure-dwarf plants in F2 generation?
Proteins control the expression of various characters. Explain this statement by taking an example of "tallness" as a characteristic in plants