Definition and Overview
Basic Concept
Codominance: simultaneous expression of both alleles in heterozygotes. Neither allele masks the other. Both phenotypes appear distinctly and equally. Contrasts with complete dominance and incomplete dominance.
Historical Context
First described in early 20th century genetics. Expanded Mendelian inheritance understanding. Influenced study of gene interactions and allele relationships.
Significance
Essential for understanding complex inheritance. Explains phenotypes not accounted for by simple dominant-recessive models. Impacts medical genetics, blood typing, breeding.
Genetic Mechanism
Allele Interaction
Two alleles at a locus produce distinct gene products. Both products functional and detectable. No suppression or blending.
Gene Expression
Alleles transcribed and translated independently. Proteins or traits expressed concurrently. Phenotypes remain separate at molecular or cellular level.
Cellular Basis
Expression occurs in same or different cell populations. Examples include cell surface antigens, enzyme variants. Both proteins coexist without interference.
Examples of Codominance
ABO Blood Group System
Alleles IA and IB both expressed in AB phenotype. A and B antigens present on red blood cells simultaneously.
Roan Coat Color in Cattle
Red and white hair alleles expressed together. Both colors visible in heterozygous individuals.
MN Blood Group
Alleles M and N produce two antigens. Individuals heterozygous exhibit both antigens on erythrocytes.
Molecular Basis
Gene Products
Alleles encode distinct polypeptides or proteins. Each retains functional activity. No dominant-negative effects.
Protein Localization
Products localized on cell surface or secreted. Both proteins coexist spatially and temporally.
Structural Differences
Allelic variants differ in amino acid sequences. Structural differences result in distinct phenotypes.
Inheritance Patterns
Autosomal Codominance
Occurs in autosomal loci. Both alleles inherited equally. Phenotypic expression in heterozygotes.
Heterozygote Phenotype
Distinct from either homozygote. Both homozygous traits expressed simultaneously.
Allele Frequency Impact
Population genetics influenced by codominant alleles. Balancing selection may maintain allele diversity.
Phenotypic Expression
Observable Traits
Traits visible as combined features. No intermediate or blended phenotype.
Quantitative vs Qualitative
Typically qualitative traits. Occasionally quantitative expression with additive effects.
Environmental Influence
Minimal effect on codominant expression. Phenotype primarily genetically determined.
Codominance in Blood Groups
ABO System
Alleles IA and IB produce A and B antigens. Both antigens co-expressed on red blood cells in AB individuals.
MN System
Alleles M and N encode glycoproteins on erythrocytes. Heterozygotes express both M and N antigens.
Clinical Importance
Blood transfusion compatibility depends on codominant antigens. Understanding codominance critical in medicine.
| Blood Group Genotype | Phenotype | Antigens Present |
|---|---|---|
| IAIA or IAi | Type A | A antigen |
| IBIB or IBi | Type B | B antigen |
| IAIB | Type AB | A and B antigens (codominant expression) |
| ii | Type O | No A or B antigens |
Genetic Crosses and Punnett Squares
Heterozygote Crosses
Crosses between codominant heterozygotes produce phenotypic ratios reflecting allele combinations.
Predicting Offspring Phenotypes
Punnett squares illustrate genotypic and phenotypic outcomes. Codominant heterozygotes show combined traits.
Example: ABO Blood Group
Parental Genotypes: IAIB x IAiGametes: IA, IB x IA, iPunnett Square: IA i ---------------IA | IAIA | IAiIB | IAIB | IBiPhenotypes: A (IAIA, IAi), AB (IAIB), B (IBi)Differences from Related Concepts
Codominance vs Complete Dominance
Complete dominance: one allele masks other. Codominance: both expressed equally.
Codominance vs Incomplete Dominance
Incomplete dominance: heterozygote shows intermediate phenotype. Codominance: both phenotypes distinct.
Codominance vs Multiple Alleles
Multiple alleles: more than two variants at locus. Codominance: refers to allele interaction, not number.
Applications and Significance
Medical Genetics
Blood typing, organ transplantation, disease marker identification. Codominant alleles critical in diagnostics.
Animal and Plant Breeding
Selection for combined traits. Maintaining heterozygote advantage. Enhancing phenotypic diversity.
Population Genetics
Studying allele frequency dynamics. Understanding heterozygote fitness and balancing selection.
Limitations and Exceptions
Detection Challenges
Phenotypic distinction requires sensitive assays. Some codominant traits subtle or molecular only.
Environmental Modulation
Environmental factors may obscure codominant expression. Penetrance and expressivity vary.
Epistatic Interactions
Other genes may mask or modify codominant traits. Complex genetic backgrounds complicate analysis.
Current Research and Trends
Genomic Technologies
High-throughput sequencing reveals codominant allele expression patterns. Transcriptomics and proteomics identify codominance at molecular level.
Evolutionary Implications
Studies on heterozygote advantage and maintenance of genetic diversity. Codominance as adaptive mechanism.
Gene Editing
CRISPR/Cas9 used to investigate allele function and codominance. Potential to engineer codominant traits.
References
- Griffiths, A.J.F., et al., Introduction to Genetic Analysis, W.H. Freeman, vol. 10, 2015, pp. 212-230.
- Alberts, B., Molecular Biology of the Cell, Garland Science, vol. 6, 2014, pp. 302-310.
- Strachan, T., Read, A.P., Human Molecular Genetics, Garland Science, vol. 5, 2010, pp. 130-145.
- Hartl, D.L., Clark, A.G., Principles of Population Genetics, Sinauer, vol. 4, 2007, pp. 85-102.
- Thompson, J.N., The Genetics and Evolution of Infectious Diseases, Oxford University Press, vol. 2, 2013, pp. 56-72.