Dominance: Difference between revisions

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#[[Complete Dominance|Complete Dominance]] - recessive phenotypes are only present in homozygous recessive [[Organism|organisms]]  
#[[Complete Dominance|Complete Dominance]] - recessive phenotypes are only present in homozygous recessive [[Organism|organisms]]  
#[https://teaching.ncl.ac.uk/bms/wiki/index.php/Incomplete_dominance Incomplete Dominance] - heterozygotes resemble neither the dominant nor the recessive phenotype  
#[[Incomplete_dominance|Incomplete Dominance]] - heterozygotes resemble neither the dominant nor the recessive phenotype  
#[[Co-dominance|Co-dominance]] - heterozygotes are a mixture of both the [[Dominant|dominant]] and [[Recessive|recessive]] phenotypes<ref>Hartl and Jones. (2009), Genetics: analysis of genes and genomes, 7th Edition, Jones and Bartlet</ref><br>
#[[Co-dominance|Co-dominance]] - heterozygotes are a mixture of both the [[Dominant|dominant]] and [[Recessive|recessive]] phenotypes<ref>Hartl and Jones. (2009), Genetics: analysis of genes and genomes, 7th Edition, Jones and Bartlet</ref><br>



Latest revision as of 06:08, 25 November 2014

A genetic term used when describing an allele whose phenotype is expressed in organisms both homozygous for that allele and heterozygous (it masks another allele - a recessive allele).  

There are three types of dominance:

  1. Complete Dominance - recessive phenotypes are only present in homozygous recessive organisms
  2. Incomplete Dominance - heterozygotes resemble neither the dominant nor the recessive phenotype
  3. Co-dominance - heterozygotes are a mixture of both the dominant and recessive phenotypes[1]

References

  1. Hartl and Jones. (2009), Genetics: analysis of genes and genomes, 7th Edition, Jones and Bartlet