Codominance
Codominance is a pattern in Non-Mendilian genetics. It is when no single allele is dominant over the other, both are present at the same time.
- There are two dominant alleles, neither allele over powers the other
- Both alleles will be capital letters
- Alleles can be represented as primes or letters. Ex: Black fur on a cat and White fur on a cat. They are both dominant but you can choose the alleles as being BW or BB'
- Codominance shows a combination of both of the traits like spotted, stripped, checkered, etc.
Example Chart:
Citations: http://www.hobart.k12.in.us/jkousen/Biology/inccodom.htm, https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1FLlmYWIKJqL2gnhXSDpcmQSRTVVudvZmrdj5Z4ZwhxE/edit#slide=id.g1396925b46_0_304
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ReplyDeleteWhen would you use a prime letter?
DeleteYou would use them if you decide to either use RW or RR'. All the prime does is add another way to know the difference between the two dominant alleles.
DeleteAre the patterns that the offspring revives (i.e. spots/checkered/stripes) completely random or is there something deeper in the genetics that determine the patterns?
ReplyDeleteThere is a possibility a parent could carry a spotted, checkered, or stripe trait but the chances of that are unlikely. So the possibilities are at random
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