Dominant allele disorders are single gene disorders which take effect in the heterozygous state.
When both alleles contribute to the phenotype of a heterozygous the alleles are said to show the dominate alleles and sometimes the recessive but mostly the dominate alleles
The genes are homogyous dominate.
homozygous(different gene)-Rr heterozygous(same gene)-RR,rr
Unless the alleles are codominate (which Mendel did not have in pea plants), one will be dominate and will be what you see (phenotype) and one will be recessive and you will not see it.
recessive alleles get masked to show the difference in a dominant gene and a recessive gene. the dominate genes masks the recessive genes to show that the dominate gene is more dominate or more likely to be the outcome than the reccessive gene but the masked gene is not always recessive.
When both alleles contribute to the phenotype of a heterozygous the alleles are said to show the dominate alleles and sometimes the recessive but mostly the dominate alleles
yes
Each gene has a dominate and recessive allele, so there are two types of alleles in each gene. The dominate allele is stronger than the recessive allele unless there are two recessive alleles.
One dominate, one recessive
A homozygous plant
This question is incomplete. To answer, the name of the alleles have to be given. Unless, you are asking about recessive and dominate genes (alleles).
(T,T) if t is the letter used for that allele capital letters are used for dominant alleles and lowercase is for recessive.
The genes are homogyous dominate.
Alleles are neither entirely recessive nor entirely dominate. An allele is any one of a number of alternative forms of the same gene on a chromosome.For example: say a flower only blooms either red or white flowers. There is a different allele for each color-- a red allele and a white allele. Now, one color may be dominate over the other recessive gene. For example, if the red color was dominate and the white color was recessive, then those certain alleles would be dominate and recessive, respectively. But alleles in general cannot be either recessive or dominate. It depends on the gene and it depends on the trait.
capital letters, such as PP equals two dominant alleles, pp equals two recessive alleles.
homozygous(different gene)-Rr heterozygous(same gene)-RR,rr
Unless the alleles are codominate (which Mendel did not have in pea plants), one will be dominate and will be what you see (phenotype) and one will be recessive and you will not see it.