BIO 325 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Mcgraw-Hill Education, Lethal Allele, Epistasis

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In chapter 3, we see that the relationship between genotype and phenotype can be more complicated than envisaged by mendel. Alleles do not have to be completely dominant or recessive with respect to each other. Genes can have more than two alleles in a population. One gene can govern more than one phenotype. A single phenotype can be influenced by more than one gene, and these genes can interact in a variety of ways. Despite these complications, the alleles of individual genes still segregate according to. Mendel"s law of segregation, and different pairs of genes still usually behave as dictated by. Key terms wild-type alleles alleles with a frequency of greater than 1% in the population. The wild-type alleles of a polymorphic gene are often called common variants. incomplete dominance and codominance cases in which the phenotype of heterozygotes is different than that of either type of homozygote.

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