LIFE SCIENCE

OBJECTIVE LIFE SCIENCE

GENETICS

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
An allele whose trait only shows up when no dominant allele is present.
A
hidden allele
B
dominant allele
C
recessive allele
D
present allele
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -Recessive alleles are only expressed when no dominant allele is present. In most sexually reproducing organisms, each individual has two alleles for each gene (one from each parent). This pair of alleles is called a genotype and determines the organism’s appearance, or phenotype.

Detailed explanation-2: -Every organism that organizes its DNA into chromosomes has two alleles for a trait, one from their mother and one from their father. Alleles can be dominant or recessive. Dominant alleles mask the effects of recessive alleles, so a recessive trait is only expressed when an organism has two recessive alleles for a gene.

Detailed explanation-3: -An individual with one dominant and one recessive allele for a gene will have the dominant phenotype. They are generally considered “carriers” of the recessive allele: the recessive allele is there, but the recessive phenotype is not.

Detailed explanation-4: -Alleles can be considered dominant or recessive, with dominant being the trait that is observed or shown and recessive being the trait is not seen. Dominant alleles are seen as an uppercase of a letter; for example, B. Recessive alleles are seen as a lower case of a letter; b.

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