Allele

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This article is only a brief description of the subject, and is not intended to give a full explanation.
Check out the "see also" or "references" sections, or Wikipedia's article for more detail.
People

Charles Darwin
Alfred Russel Wallace
Richard Dawkins

Science

Common descent
Evolution
Evidence
Genes
Alleles
Natural selection

Pseudoscience

Young Earth Creationism
Old Earth Creationism
Intelligent Design
"Microevolution" vs.
"Macroevolution"

An allele is a variation of a gene.

Contents

[edit] Alleles in the genome

Most genes only have one allele, however some have multiple variants. For example, the gene for eye color in humans (and some other animals) has several alleles: blue, green, brown, etc. In paired chromosomes, it is possible to have two alleles present, one in each copy of the chromosome. Where both alleles are the same in the pair, the organism is referred to as homozygous with respect to that gene. Where the alleles are different, it is referred to as heterozygous.

[edit] Dominant and recessive genes

Alleles can be described as "dominant" or "recessive" and a mixture of the two can appear in allele pairs in the genome. In some cases, one allele will be dominant while the other is recessive, and the dominant gene will be the only allele expressed. Only individuals with two recessive alleles of a gene (homozygous recessive) will express the recessive form. Genes may also be co-dominant (both or all alleles expressed) or have incomplete dominance (alleles "blend" to form an intermediate type in the phenotype).

[edit] See also

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