Co-dominance & Incomplete Dominance
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Transcript Co-dominance & Incomplete Dominance
Co-dominance & Incomplete
Dominance Notes
Co-dominance
Co-dominance – when both alleles of a
gene contribute to the phenotype
Examples:
Chickens – black feathers is codominant with white feathers, so
heterozygous chickens show up with
speckled black and white feathers
Human Blood Types
Human Blood Types
• Human Blood Types are
another example of codominance
• There are 3 alleles for
this gene (IA, IB & i) and
i is recessive, while IA
and IB are co-dominant,
so people who receive
one of each of these
alleles will have AB
blood
IAIA
IAi
IBIB
IBi
IAIB
Co-Dominance Sample Problems #1
Use the chart to answer the following questions:
Write the genotype for each person based on the
description:
Homozygous for the “B” allele
IBIB
Heterozygous for the “A” allele
I Ai
Type O
ii
Type AB
I AI B
Co-Dominance Sample Problem #2
Pretend that Brad Pitt is
homozygous for the type B
allele, and Angelina Jolie is
type “O.” Do a Punnett
square to determine all the
possible blood types of
their baby.
All their offspring, will be
IBi, so will have Type B
blood
IB
i
i
IB
IBi
IBi
IBi
IBi
Co-Dominance Sample Problem #3
Two parents think their baby was switched at the
hospital. The mother has blood type “A,” the father
has blood type “B,” and the baby has blood type
“AB.”
IA
Mother’s genotype
IAIA or IAi
Father’s genotype
IBIB or IBi
Baby’s genotype
IAIB
IB
i
I AI B
IBi
I Ai
ii
Do a Punnett square that shows the baby’s
genotype as a possibility
Was the baby switched?
NO
i
Co-Dominance Sample Problem #4
Based on the
information in this
table, which man
could not be the
father of the baby?
Justify your answer
with a Punnett
square.
Sammy the player
Name
Blood Type
Mother
Type A (Heterozygous)
Baby
Type B
Sammy the player
Type O
George the sleeze
Type AB
The waiter
Type AB
The cable guy
Type B
IA
i
i
i
I Ai
ii
I Ai
ii
Probability
What is probability?
The likelihood a particular event will
occur
How is it used in Biology?
Used to predict phenotypes and genotypes
of offspring (diseases & disorders for
people planning families)
Additional Information
Probability = # of times an event occurs
# of trials
A previous event does not affect future
outcomes. Each event is separate and
independent
Ex. Gender of baby – 50/50 chance of
each sex each birth
Incomplete Dominance
Incomplete Dominance – when one allele is not
completely dominant over the other allele, so it produces
offspring with a third phenotype that is a blending of the
parental traits.
It's like mixing paints, red + white will make pink. Red
doesn't totally block (dominate) the white, instead there
is incomplete dominance, and we end up with something
in-between.
Instead of using a capital letter for the dominant trait & a
lowercase letter for the recessive trait, the letters we use
are both going to be capital (because neither trait
dominates the other).
Incomplete Dominance
Four o’clock flowers show this
type of inheritance
Red flowers are RR, white are
WW and the heterozygous
genotype RW, gets you pink
flowers
So looking at the following
Punnett Square, what percentage
of pink flowers would be
produced?
100%
Incomplete Dominance Sample Problem #1
Suppose you cross 2 pink flowers that show
incomplete dominance (R=Red, W=W).
What are the parent genotypes?
RW; RW
Do a Punnett Square.
What is the probability of:
Red
R
R
25%
White
25%
Pink
50%
W
W
RR
RW
RW
WW
Incomplete Dominance Sample Problem #2
In Elmo’s family red (R) and blue (B) show
incomplete dominance.
What is the Genotype of:
Red
RR
Blue
BB
Purple
RB
Incomplete Dominance Sample
Problem #3
If both of Elmo’s
parents were purple,
R
what is the probability R
RR
that his next sibling
will be blue (Do a
RB
B
Punnett square to
show your results)?
25%
B
RB
BB