Codominance

Introduction

  A link between two variants of a gene is considered as codominance. Each parent contributes to each child one allele, which is a variant of a gene. If the alleles are different, the dominant allele will normally be manifested, while the weak allele’s effect will be muted. However, neither allele is recessive in codominance, and the phenotypes of both alleles are expressed.

Codominance and multiple alleles 

Codominance 

 People display features such as hair colour and eye colour through codominance. The codominance definition is an inheritance pattern where both alleles in a heterozygote are expressed equally. Different genes are inherited and expressed in different ways, which are referred to as inheritance patterns. Genes are the  DNA segments which involve the code for proteins. Alleles are various variants of the same gene. The genotype is the overall combination of alleles a person inherits for all genes. Each person inherits two alleles for each gene in humans, though there may be more than two allele alternatives for each gene. The phenotype describes how these alleles manifest themselves in the organism, and it is composed of observable qualities. Depending on the situation, various alleles can interact in different ways. Here are some instances of inheritance patterns: 

  1. Both alleles are expressed equally in codominance.\
  2. Incomplete dominance occurs when two alleles mix.  
  3. One allele converts another in dominant/recessive inheritance.
  4. Alleles are carried on the sex chromosomes and are sex-linked.

Codominant Alleles

Codominant alleles are gene variants where neither allele is dominant over the other. Instead, the two alleles are expressed in the same way. When one allele conceals the recessive allele, neither allele is dominant. Rather, both alleles are dominant in codominant alleles, thus considered as “codominant.”

Codominant Traits

When both alleles of a gene are expressed equally, thus both protein products are produced, resulting in a codominant characteristic. The phenotype of an organism is determined by the proteins produced by genes during gene expression. As a result, codominant alleles produce a phenotype that is not blended, nor does it promote one attribute over the other, but rather has both alleles’ protein product.

Examples of Codominance in Humans

In humans, there are numerous instances of codominance, including:

  • Type of blood
  • Sickle cell disease is a type of anaemia that affects people.

The main phenotypes of blood types which are present in human beings are Type A, type B, type o, and type AB are. The expression of sugars on the surface of red blood cells determines blood type. A sugars are produced by people who inherit A allele for blood type. B sugars are produced by people who inherit the B allele for blood type. People with the o allele for blood type do not produce any glucose. As a result, a person with the genotype Ao would only make A sugars and hence have the phenotype for type A blood. The A and B blood type alleles are codominant. The A and B blood type alleles are codominant. If a person inherits both an A and a B allele, they will produce both sugars and have the blood type AB. The genotypes and phenotypes of human blood types are tabulated in the table below.

Blood Type

Possible Genotypes

Sugars Made

      Type A

 

            AA, Ao

    A Sugars

       Type B

            BB, Bo 

    B sugars

       Type o

             oo

   No sugars are made

       Type AB

             AB

   Both A and B sugars are made

 

One allele, abbreviated S for sickle cell, carries a mutation that causes the protein haemoglobin to clump together in red blood cells, resulting in sickle cell anaemia. They grow distorted and sickle-shaped as a result of this. Haemoglobin is unable to deliver oxygen efficiently as a result, and red blood cells become stuck in microscopic capillaries throughout the body. The normal allele for haemoglobin, N, results in normal haemoglobin that is properly formed and so efficiently transports oxygen. The phenotype of people with the genotype NN is normal since they produce all normal haemoglobin. People with one S allele have some sickle cell red blood cells and hence produce both normal and sickle cell haemoglobin in equal amounts. They do not have full sickle cell disease, as they have normal haemoglobin, as persons with the SS genotype have, which is known as sickle cell trait.

Multiple Alleles

Multiple alleles are a type of non-Mendelian or puzzling inheritance pattern in which a species’ trait is encoded by more than the usual two alleles.

 

Multiple alleles are present when more than two phenotypes are accessible, depending on whether the trait has dominant or recessive genes, as well as the dominance pattern that the individual genes follow when combined.

In Gregor Mendel’s pea plants, only simple or full dominant features were examined, and there were only two alleles that might contribute to whatever feature the plant presented.

It wasn’t until later that some scientists noticed that some traits could have many alleles that code for various phenotypes. This allowed researchers to see a greater number of phenotypes for every given trait even while adhering to Mendel’s Laws of Inheritance.

Conclusion

The codominance definition is an inheritance pattern where both alleles in a heterozygote are expressed equally. Different genes are inherited and expressed in different ways, which are referred to as inheritance patterns. Genes are the  DNA segments which involve the code for proteins. Codominant alleles are gene variants where neither allele is dominant over the other. Instead, the two alleles are expressed in the same way. When one allele conceals the recessive allele, neither allele is dominant.