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3.4: Biochemical Basis of Dominance

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    42789
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    Given that a heterozygote’s phenotype cannot simply be predicted from the phenotype of homozygotes, what does the type of dominance tell us about the biochemical nature of the gene product? How does dominance work at the biochemical level? There are several different biochemical mechanisms that may make one allele dominant to another.

    For the majority of genes studied, the normal (i.e. wild-type) alleles are haplosufficient. So in diploids, even with a mutation that causes a complete loss of function in one allele, the other allele, a wild-type allele, will provide sufficient normal biochemical activity to yield a wild type phenotype and thus be dominant and dictate the heterozygote phenotype.

    On the other hand, in some biochemical pathways, a single wild-type allele is not enough protein and may be haploinsufficient to produce enough biochemical activity to result in a normal phenotype, when heterozygous with a non-functioning mutant allele. In this case, the non-functional mutant allele will be dominant (or semi-dominant) to a wild-type allele.

    Mutant alleles may also encode products that have new and/or different biochemical activities instead of, or in addition to, the normal ones. These novel activities could cause a new phenotype that would be dominantly expressed.


    This page titled 3.4: Biochemical Basis of Dominance is shared under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Todd Nickle and Isabelle Barrette-Ng via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.