Penetrance: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
120052725 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
Minor typo correction.
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
&nbsp;Penetrance is the percentage of the expression of the [[Phenotype|phenotype]] in an [[Organism|organism]] from its adjacent [[Genotype|genotype]].<ref>Hartl,D.L.,Ruvolo,M.(2012)Genetics:Analysis Of Genes And Genomes,United States of America:Jones &amp; Bartlett</ref>
Penetrance is the percentage of the expression of the [[Phenotype|phenotype]] in an [[Organism|organism]] from its adjacent [[Genotype|genotype]]&nbsp;<ref>Hartl, D.L., Ruvolo, M. (2012) Genetics:Analysis Of Genes And Genomes, United States of America: Jones and Bartlett</ref>&nbsp;(e.g.&nbsp;how many members of a [[Population|population]] with a specific genotype that show the expected phenotype).


== '''Reference'''  ==
An example of complete pentrance is [[Neurofibromatosis type 1|neurofibromatosis type I]]. The symptoms of this mutation will be shown in all of the mutants - 100% penetrance.&nbsp;<ref>NHS. (ND). Penetrance. Available at: http://www.geneticseducation.nhs.uk/genetic-glossary/221-penetrance (Accessed at: 26/11/14)</ref>


<br>
Incomplete penetrance is when some individuals with a particular (dominant) mutation express a wild type phenotype. An example is [[Polydactyly|polydactyly]].
 
=== Reference  ===
 
<references />

Latest revision as of 08:29, 28 November 2016

Penetrance is the percentage of the expression of the phenotype in an organism from its adjacent genotype [1] (e.g. how many members of a population with a specific genotype that show the expected phenotype).

An example of complete pentrance is neurofibromatosis type I. The symptoms of this mutation will be shown in all of the mutants - 100% penetrance. [2]

Incomplete penetrance is when some individuals with a particular (dominant) mutation express a wild type phenotype. An example is polydactyly.

Reference

  1. Hartl, D.L., Ruvolo, M. (2012) Genetics:Analysis Of Genes And Genomes, United States of America: Jones and Bartlett
  2. NHS. (ND). Penetrance. Available at: http://www.geneticseducation.nhs.uk/genetic-glossary/221-penetrance (Accessed at: 26/11/14)