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  2. Loss of heterozygosity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss_of_heterozygosity

    The remaining copy of the tumor suppressor gene can be inactivated by a point mutation or via other mechanisms, resulting in a loss of heterozygosity event, and leaving no tumor suppressor gene to protect the body. Loss of heterozygosity does not imply a homozygous state (which would require the presence of two identical alleles in the cell).

  3. Muller's morphs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muller's_morphs

    Hypomorphic describes a mutation that causes a partial loss of gene function. [1] A hypomorph is a reduction in gene function through reduced (protein, RNA) expression or reduced functional performance, but not a complete loss. The phenotype of a hypomorph is more severe in trans to a deletion allele than when homozygous. [2] m/DF > m/m

  4. Major histocompatibility complex and sexual selection

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_histocompatibility...

    MHC-based sexual selection is known to involve olfactory mechanisms in such vertebrate taxa as fish, mice, humans, primates, birds, and reptiles. [1] At its simplest level, humans have long been acquainted with the sense of olfaction for its use in determining the pleasantness or the unpleasantness of one's resources, food, etc.

  5. Compound heterozygosity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compound_heterozygosity

    In medical genetics, compound heterozygosity is the condition of having two or more heterogeneous recessive alleles at a particular locus that can cause genetic disease in a heterozygous state; that is, an organism is a compound heterozygote when it has two recessive alleles for the same gene, but with those two alleles being different from each other (for example, both alleles might be ...

  6. Mismatch repair endonuclease PMS2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mismatch_repair_endo...

    In 16 cancers Pms2 was deficient even though MLH1 protein expression was present. Of these 16 cases, no cause was determined for 10, but 6 were found to have a heterozygous germline mutation in Pms2, followed by likely loss of heterozygosity in the tumor. Thus only 6 of 119 tumors lacking expression for Pms2 (5%) were due to mutation of PMS2.

  7. Mosaic (genetics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic_(genetics)

    [15] [16] In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, where a fly possessing two X chromosomes is a female and a fly possessing a single X chromosome is a sterile male, a loss of an X chromosome early in embryonic development can result in sexual mosaics, or gynandromorphs. [5] [17] Likewise, a loss of the Y chromosome can result in XY/X mosaic ...

  8. Hardy–Weinberg principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardy–Weinberg_principle

    A dominant allele can be inherited from a homozygous dominant parent with probability 1, or from a heterozygous parent with probability 0.5. To represent this reasoning in an equation, let A t {\displaystyle \textstyle A_{t}} represent inheritance of a dominant allele from a parent.

  9. Mitotic recombination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitotic_recombination

    Mitotic recombination is a type of genetic recombination that may occur in somatic cells during their preparation for mitosis in both sexual and asexual organisms. In asexual organisms, the study of mitotic recombination is one way to understand genetic linkage because it is the only source of recombination within an individual. [1]

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