Humans typically have two alleles for each gene, one inherited from each parent. These alleles can be the same (homozygous) or different (heterozygous), and they determine various characteristics. However, for traits controlled by multiple genes, the total number of alleles can vary significantly. Overall, the combination of alleles contributes to the diversity of traits in individuals.
It depends on the organism but humans have two alleles.
With 10 alleles, there can be 45 possible pair combinations (10 choose 2 = 45) if we are considering pairs of alleles. If we are looking at all possible combinations including single alleles, there would be 1+10+45 = 56 total outcomes.
Alleles
Different alleles allow people to have different traits from each other.
On average, parents share 50% of their alleles with their children. This means that each parent will pass down around half of their genetic information to their offspring in the form of alleles.
Three common blood alleles are A, B, and O. A person's blood type is determined by the combination of these alleles. People with type A blood have A alleles, people with type B have B alleles, people with type AB have both A and B alleles, and people with type O have neither A nor B alleles.
He did not have many bad charcteristics. He just wanted to rule the other gods!
It depends on the organism but humans have two alleles.
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No, often many other alleles will also determine the same trait. For example, many alleles put together will determine a person's skin color.
An offspring inherits two alleles for each gene, one from each parent. These alleles can be the same (homozygous) or different (heterozygous).
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