| recessive trait |
The opposite of dominant. A trait that is preferentially masked.
Ãâó: www.biology.arizona.edu/vocabulary/mendelian_genet...
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| recessive |
Does not usually affect the phenotype of the organism
Ãâó: revisioncentre.co.uk/gcse/biology/genetic_terminol...
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| recessive |
An allele's effect is not seen if another, more dominant allele is present. Red is recessie to black. For a dog to be red, he must have two copies of the red gene (bb). If he has a copy of red and one of black, the effect of red will not be visible and the dog will be black (Bb).
Ãâó: www.ashgi.org/color/genetic_terms.htm
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| recessive |
The form of the gene that is masked by another form in the heterozygous condition. For example, the allele for no hair on knuckles (h) is recessive to the allele for hairy knuckles (H); a person with Hh genotype has hairy knuckles. Recessive alleles are often written in lower case letters. See dominant.
Ãâó: chroma.gs.washington.edu/outreach/genetics/glossar...
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| recessive |
When a gene is inherited in a recessive fashion, the mutated allele will not be expressed if there is a normal copy. You must possess two recessive alleles to show the mutated phenotype. eg. cystic fibrosis. (Opposite to dominant)
Ãâó: www.mountsinai.on.ca/FamMedGen/Glossary/default.ht...
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