A definition of dominant mutation

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the definition of a dominant mutation in genetics, specifically regarding nucleotide mutations at a locus. Two primary interpretations are presented: one suggests that a dominant mutation creates a new allele that is dominant over the original allele, while the other posits that it is dominant over other alleles, potentially co-dominant with the original. The concept of co-dominance is clarified, indicating that both alleles can exhibit dominance over others. The conversation also touches on the nature of "autosomal dominant" traits, which manifest phenotypically in heterozygous conditions, and the implications of dominant negative mutations that interfere with normal gene function. Additionally, questions arise about the hierarchy of dominance among alleles and whether dominance can vary in levels, highlighting the ambiguity surrounding the term "dominance" in genetics. The discussion emphasizes the complexity of defining dominance and its implications in evolutionary biology.
studious
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
This is a question of semantics(?). Biologists are not known to be gods of well-definedness, but if there actually exists an argument over the following question (even a possibility), then I might get some credit back on some classwork.

What is the definition of a dominant mutation (of a nucleotide of an allele at some locus)?

1. That the mutation yields a new allele which is necessarily dominant w.r.t. to the un-mutated (old) allele.

2. That the mutation yields a new allele which is necessarily dominant to "other" alleles (or perhaps co-dominant with the unmutated version).


Co-dominance of two alleles at a locus implies that they are both equally dominant over other alleles.
 
Biology news on Phys.org
My understanding of "autosomal dominant" is that the phenotype is displayed under heterogeneous expression. In addition, "dominant negative" mutations mean that the mutated gene product affects the function of the normal gene product (a 'gain of function' mutation).

Does that help?
 
Not good enough.

Is "dominance" ordered for a set of alleles? Are there different levels of dominance? The term dominance itself is too vague.

(sure gain of function mutations are "usually" dominant; however, silent mutations of dominant alleles also retain dominance... in fact co-dominance with the non-mutated versions... over time - generations - they may come into equal allele frequencies... whatever the actual values.)
 
Popular article referring to the BA.2 variant: Popular article: (many words, little data) https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/17/health/ba-2-covid-severity/index.html Preprint article referring to the BA.2 variant: Preprint article: (At 52 pages, too many words!) https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.02.14.480335v1.full.pdf [edited 1hr. after posting: Added preprint Abstract] Cheers, Tom

Similar threads

Replies
10
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
32K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
15K
Replies
1
Views
4K
Back
Top