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HEREDITAS(Beijing) ›› 2015, Vol. 37 ›› Issue (1): 98-108.doi: 10.16288/j.yczz.2015.01.014

• Geneties Teaching • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms of dominant and recessive inheritance in genetics course

Wanjin Xing, Morigen   

  1. School of Life Sciences, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot 010021, China
  • Received:2014-09-02 Revised:2014-10-01 Online:2015-01-20 Published:2015-01-20

Abstract: In Mendellian genetics, the dominance and recessiveness are used to describe the functional relationship between two alleles of one gene in a heterozygote. The allele which constitutes a phenotypical character over the other is named dominant and the one functionally masked is called recessive. The definitions thereby led to the creation of Mendel’s laws on segregation and independent assortment and subsequent classic genetics. The discrimination of dominance and recessiveness originally is a requirement for Mendel’s logical reasoning, but now it should be explained by cellular and molecular principles in the modern genetics. To answer the question raised by students of how the dominance and recessiveness are controlled, we reviewed the recent articles and tried to summarize the cellular and molecular basis of dominant and recessive inheritance. Clearly, understanding the essences of dominant and recessive inheritance requires us to know the dissimilarity of the alleles and their products (RNA and/or proteins), and the way of their function in cells. The alleles spatio-temporally play different roles on offering cells, tissues or organs with discernible phenotypes, namely dominant or recessive. Here, we discuss the changes of allele dominance and recessiveness at the cellular and molecular levels based on the variation of gene structure, gene regulation, function and types of gene products, in order to make students understand gene mutation and function more comprehensively and concretely.

Key words: genetics, teaching, alleles, dominance, recessiveness