To determine the type of allele relationship being referred to, I would need specific information about the alleles in question or the context of the example provided. Common types of allele relationships include complete dominance, incomplete dominance, co-dominance, and epistasis. If you can provide more details about the alleles or traits involved, I can give a more precise answer.
The dominant allele will always show physically in an individual, while the recessive allele will only be expressed if paired with another recessive allele.
This is an example of co-dominance in which both alleles are expressed equally.
You could be blood type B or O, as you inherit one blood type allele from each parent. If you inherit a B allele from your mother and an O allele from your father, you would be blood type B. If you inherit an O allele from both parents, you would be blood type O.
If I am not mistaken, blood type A has IaIa and Iai. Blood type O is ii. So it really depends on what allele they inherited, they could either be an O or an A.
The allele that is expressed in an individual is referred to as the dominant allele. This allele masks the effect of the recessive allele when present.
A recessive allele will not show up if there is a dominant allele present.
Type AB
The dominant allele will always show physically in an individual, while the recessive allele will only be expressed if paired with another recessive allele.
The allele that causes Huntington's disease is dominant. This means that there only needs to be one present in the gene for it to show in the person's phenotype.
If someone inherits one A allele for blood type and one B allele for blood type, what will that person's blood type be?
type A
You cross a pure-breeding plant with red flowers and a pure-breeding plant with white flowers. All the offspring have red and white speckled flowers. What type of allele relationship does this show?
If you mean allele, then the answer is a recessive allele. A recessive allele is dominated by a dominant allele, and generally does not show up physically.
In a relationship where one allele is completely dominant over another in genetic inheritance, the dominant allele will always be expressed in the phenotype, while the recessive allele will only be expressed if both alleles are recessive. This is known as complete dominance.
In a dominant-recessive allele relationship, the dominant allele will be expressed phenotypically over the recessive allele. This means that even if an organism carries one dominant and one recessive allele for a particular trait, the dominant allele will determine the observable characteristic.
the dominant allele is in all egg nuclei.
Do you mean allele? An allele is a different molecular form of the same gene.