Tuesday, December 13, 2011

AndyD's Muddiest Point

My muddiest point is the difference between autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant and how they work.

2 comments:

  1. Autosomal dominant is when there is a capital, also known as dominant, letter paired with a lower case(recessive) letter, whichever trait the dominant letter represents stays over the lowercase. For example, B(brown) and b(blonde), when they are paired together Bb, brown is dominant over blonde. Autosomal recessive is when there are two lowercase, or recessive alleles paired together it is autosomal recessive. For example, b(blonde), when it is paired bb it is autosomal recessive.

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  2. thank you Sara i really appreciate it =D.

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