Classic Recessive-or-Dominant Gene Dynamics May Not Be So Simple
Posted4 months agoActive4 months ago
news.stanford.eduResearchstory
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GeneticsEpigeneticsPesticide Resistance
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Genetics
Epigenetics
Pesticide Resistance
A Stanford study challenges the traditional understanding of recessive and dominant gene dynamics, revealing complexities in gene expression, and sparking discussion on the role of environmental factors in epigenetic expression.
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SubiculumCode
4 months ago
2 repliesEnvironment modulates epigenetic expression so that, at times, recessive genes actually get expressed more?
EduardLev
4 months ago
1 replyNot a biologist but I don't think it has to do with how much the genes get expressed but rather that they do get expressed and in bad times (pesticide) they're really good and look like they dominate (in that you only need one copy to get the expression/benefits) but in good times (pesticide free) they don't introduce that much negative cost and so you need two copies for adverse effects.
privatelypublic
4 months ago
1 replyHaven't we known the middle school recessive/dominant explanation to be so incomplete as to be wrong for ages?
kjkjadksj
4 months ago
No, some things follow those patterns quite well. Mendels pea results aren’t wrong.
kjkjadksj
4 months ago
A beetle allele is dominant white and recessive black. It is found on white sand. This beetle ends up on a black sand beach and proliferates. Birds see the white beetle plain as day and eat them. The allele frequencies of the black recessive beetle on the black beach surge as a result to the point where it is the more frequent allele observed.
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