BIO 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 12.2: Blood Type, Pleiotropy, Blood Cell

90 views2 pages

Document Summary

Overtime genes accumulate changes, giving rise to new alleles. There can be many alleles for a single character. Alleles don"t always show simple dominance-recessive relationships. A single allele may have multiple phenotypic effects. Geneticists usually define one particular allele of a gene as the wild type. Present in most individuals in nature and gives rise to an expected trait or phenotype. Other alleles of that gene called mutant alleles will produce a different phenotype. Wild and mutant-type alleles reside at the same genetic locus. A genetic locus with a wild-type allele that is present less than 99% of the time is said to be polymorphic. Because of random mutations, more than 2 alleles of a given gene may exist in a group of individuals. Among multiple individuals there may be several different alleles. Dominance is always complete in heterozygous individuals. Many genes have alleles that are not dominant or recessive to one another.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers
Class+
$8 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
30 Verified Answers

Related textbook solutions

Related Documents

Related Questions