Definition of Dominance

Allelic Interaction

Dominance: relationship between alleles where one masks the expression of another at the same locus. Dominant allele: expressed phenotype in heterozygote. Recessive allele: masked phenotype in heterozygote.

Effect on Phenotype

Phenotypic expression depends on dominance status of alleles. Dominant allele determines trait manifestation despite presence of recessive allele.

Genetic Context

Dominance pertains to diploid organisms with paired homologous chromosomes bearing alleles. Interaction influences observed traits.

Historical Background

Gregor Mendel’s Discoveries

1865: Mendel formulated laws of inheritance using Pisum sativum. Concept of dominant and recessive traits emerged from monohybrid crosses.

Terminology Development

Dominance term introduced to describe consistent trait expression in hybrids. Early 20th century refined understanding of allele interactions.

Modern Interpretations

Molecular genetics advanced dominance concept beyond phenotype to gene product interactions and regulatory mechanisms.

Types of Dominance

Complete Dominance

Dominant allele fully masks recessive allele in heterozygote. Phenotype identical to homozygous dominant.

Incomplete Dominance

Heterozygote phenotype intermediate between homozygous dominant and recessive. Partial expression of both alleles.

Codominance

Both alleles expressed equally and distinctly in heterozygote. No masking occurs; both phenotypes visible.

Overdominance

Heterozygote phenotype exceeds that of either homozygote. Often linked to heterozygote advantage.

Variable Dominance

Dominance strength varies depending on genetic background or environmental factors.

Molecular Basis of Dominance

Gene Products and Enzymatic Activity

Dominant alleles typically encode functional proteins; recessive alleles often produce nonfunctional or reduced-function proteins.

Haploinsufficiency

Phenotype results from insufficient gene product in heterozygote; incomplete dominance or recessivity observed.

Dominant Negative Effects

Mutant allele product interferes with wild-type protein function, causing dominant phenotype.

Gene Regulation and Expression

Allelic expression levels and regulatory sequences influence dominance relationships.

Genetic Notation and Terminology

Allele Symbols

Dominant alleles: uppercase letters (e.g., A). Recessive alleles: lowercase letters (e.g., a).

Genotype Representation

Homozygous dominant: AA. Heterozygous: Aa. Homozygous recessive: aa.

Phenotype Notation

Described by trait expression; often linked to genotype but influenced by dominance.

Phenotypic Expression Patterns

Dominant Phenotype

Expressed when at least one dominant allele present. Visible trait manifestation.

Recessive Phenotype

Expressed only in homozygous recessive genotype. Masked in presence of dominant allele.

Intermediate Phenotype

Occurs in incomplete dominance; phenotype blends dominant and recessive traits.

Simultaneous Expression

In codominance, both alleles’ traits visible independently in heterozygote.

Dominance in Inheritance Patterns

Monohybrid Crosses

Test crosses reveal dominance by phenotypic ratios (3:1 dominant to recessive in F2 generation).

Dihybrid and Polygenic Inheritance

Dominance applies to each gene independently. Complex traits may show multiple dominance interactions.

Sex-linked Traits

Dominance affected by chromosomal context; X-linked recessive traits expressed in hemizygous males.

Dominance Modification

Epistasis and gene interactions can alter expected dominance phenotypes.

Exceptions and Complexities

Incomplete Penetrance

Dominant allele not always expressed; phenotype absent despite genotype.

Variable Expressivity

Degree of dominant trait expression varies among individuals.

Environmental Influence

External factors modulate dominance expression and phenotype.

Multiple Alleles

More than two allele forms at a locus complicate dominance hierarchies.

Experimental Evidence

Mendelian Crosses

Classic pea plant experiments demonstrated clear dominant/recessive patterns.

Allelic Series Studies

Analysis of multiple alleles showed gradients of dominance strength.

Molecular Genetics Techniques

Gene knockout and expression assays elucidate molecular dominance mechanisms.

Population Genetics Data

Allele frequency changes reflect dominance effects on fitness and selection.

Applications in Genetics

Genetic Counseling

Dominance knowledge predicts inheritance risk and phenotype probability in families.

Breeding Programs

Dominance exploited to select desirable dominant traits in crops and livestock.

Medical Genetics

Dominance patterns assist diagnosis and management of genetic disorders.

Biotechnology

Gene editing considers dominance for trait modification strategies.

Comparative Genetics

Dominance Across Species

Conserved dominance mechanisms observed in plants, animals, fungi.

Evolutionary Implications

Dominance influences allele maintenance and adaptive potential.

Dominance Modifiers

Genes that alter dominance relationships evolve differently across taxa.

Summary

Key Concepts

Dominance: allele interaction determining phenotype. Types include complete, incomplete, codominance. Molecular basis involves gene product function.

Importance

Central to understanding Mendelian inheritance, predicting traits, and genetic analysis.

Continuing Research

Complex dominance patterns and molecular mechanisms remain active study areas.

References

  • Griffiths, A.J.F., et al. Introduction to Genetic Analysis. 11th ed., W.H. Freeman, 2019, pp. 123-145.
  • Hartl, D.L., Clark, A.G. Principles of Population Genetics. 4th ed., Sinauer Associates, 2007, pp. 89-115.
  • Strachan, T., Read, A.P. Human Molecular Genetics. 4th ed., Garland Science, 2010, pp. 56-78.
  • Alberts, B., et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 6th ed., Garland Science, 2014, pp. 301-325.
  • King, R.C., Stansfield, W.D., Mulligan, P.K. A Dictionary of Genetics. 8th ed., Oxford University Press, 2020, pp. 98-102.
Type of DominanceAllelic InteractionPhenotypic Outcome
Complete DominanceDominant allele masks recessiveHeterozygote shows dominant phenotype
Incomplete DominancePartial expression of both allelesIntermediate phenotype
CodominanceBoth alleles expressed equallyBoth phenotypes visible simultaneously
Genotype to Phenotype Mapping:AA (Homozygous Dominant) -> Dominant phenotypeAa (Heterozygous) -> Dominant phenotype (complete dominance)Aa (Heterozygous) -> Intermediate phenotype (incomplete dominance)Aa (Heterozygous) -> Both phenotypes (codominance)aa (Homozygous Recessive) -> Recessive phenotype
Monohybrid Cross Punnett Square (A = dominant, a = recessive): | A | a | ---------------- A | AA | Aa | ---------------- a | Aa | aa |

"Dominance is not a property of alleles but of the relationship between alleles in a particular genetic and environmental context." -- Kacser and Burns (1981)

Dominance defines phenotypic outcomes of allele pairs, essential for predicting inheritance patterns and understanding genetic architecture.