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Published byLeona Wells Modified over 9 years ago
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BEYOND MENDEL’S LAWS Heredity
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Incomplete Dominance Review: Inherited traits were either dominant or recessive The dominant allele in an individual was always expressed, even if the recessive allele was present However......there are exceptions to Mendel’s work
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In some cases, neither allele is completely dominant Therefore, in a heterozygous individual, there is a blending of 2 traits This is called Incomplete Dominance
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Example R = Red R’ = White (R’ is used rather than “r” to indicate incomplete dominance) A pure red snapdragon flower (RR) is crossed with a pure white snapdragon flower (R’R’). Neither trait is dominant. RR R’ RR’ R’ RR’ RR’ is neither red nor white, but rather, pink
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Co-dominance In other cases, both alleles may be dominant and are both expressed This is called Co-dominance Ex. Feathers of black birds and white birds
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Multiple Alleles Many genes have more than 2 different alleles, or multiple alleles Example: Human blood types 3 different possible alleles for blood type I A I B I O I A and I B are co-dominant and are dominant over I O There can only be two alleles in blood type, but there are three alleles to choose from Possible genotypes: I A I A, I B I B, I A I B, I A I O, I B I O, I O I O Possible phenotypes: Type A, Type B, Type AB, Type O
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