Prostate Restored
Photo: cottonbro studio
So all in all the answer to your question is neither! Blonde hair, brown hair, blue eyes, browns eyes … none of those traits are dominant or recessive, as they are not due to a single gene.
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Read More »This is a great question! From a first pass we might conclude that blue eyes and blonde hair are recessive. Unfortunately we’d be wrong about the blonde hair — and only partly right about eye color. The way you figure out if a trait is dominant or recessive is you look for patterns. As I’ll explain in more detail later, if a trait is recessive, then it can appear even if both parents don’t have that trait. Another way to tell if a trait is recessive is if both parents and all their kids share that same trait. In our case here, both parents have brown eyes but they had a blue-eyed child. So this follows the first pattern meaning blue eyes are recessive. The same would be true for blonde hair. Both parents had brown hair but they had a child with blonde hair. As I said, though, we’d be wrong. It turns out that eye color and most hair colors are way too complicated to be simple dominant/recessive traits. Surprisingly, blue-eyed parents sometimes have a brown-eyed child. Now this isn’t that common so we could still say that blue eyes are mostly recessive. The same isn’t really true for blonde hair. Blonde parents often have darker haired children (or even redheads).
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Read More »With this trait, two parents who can’t taste PTC rarely have a child that can taste it. And sometimes parents who can taste PTC have a child that can’t taste it. This fits our patterns meaning that the ability to taste PTC is a dominant trait (and not being able to taste is a recessive one). Let’s dig a bit deeper to see why. There are two versions of the gene that determine if you can taste PTC—T and t. The T version lets you taste PTC and the t version does not. Another name for these two different versions of the same gene are alleles. Whether or not a person can taste PTC depends on which alleles of the gene they have. If this is all there was then it would be very hard to see why tasters even had nontasters. To understand that, we need to know that people have two copies of each gene. They get one copy from their mom and one from their dad. The ability to taste PTC, a bitter chemical similar to one found in broccoli, is usually due to a single gene. If a person gets two copies of the T allele (so their genotype is TT), then it is clear that they will be able to taste PTC. The same idea holds true if they get two copies of the t allele. In this case they will be tt and so not be able to taste PTC. However, if a person gets one copy of the T allele, and one of the t allele, it turns out they can still taste PTC. This means that tasting PTC (the T allele) is dominant because if you get a single copy from either parent you show that version of the trait. In other words, these carriers can taste PTC. The opposite is true for not being able to taste PTC (the t allele). It is recessive, as it will be hidden whenever a person has a T copy of the gene. So the only combination that will cause a person to NOT be able to taste PTC is when they have two copies of the t allele (tt). Now we are almost ready to explain why nontaster parents rarely have a taster child and why taster parents sometimes have a child that can’t taste PTC. The last piece of the puzzle we need is that each parent passes just one of their alleles to his or her child. And that allele is chosen at random. Now we are ready to see where the patterns come from. We’ll do this by looking at three different scenarios. First, let’s imagine two nontaster parents. Here is what this might look like genetically: First off, you can see that both parents are tt. This is the definition of a nontaster. Remember each child will get one allele from mom and one from dad. Since the parents can only pass a t, all the kids are guaranteed to be tt. None of them will be able to taste PTC. This is why parents with a recessive trait have children with recessive traits too.
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Read More »(Even this isn’t 100% for PTC. Occasionally parents who can’t taste PTC have a child that can. There are a number of ways this can happen but most of the time, these parents would have a child who can’t taste PTC.)
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