Question:

The $ABO$ blood grouping in human beings is an example for: i) Dominance ii) Incomplete dominance iii) Co-dominance iv) Multiple alleles

Updated On: Jul 28, 2022
  • i and ii only
  • ii, iii and iv
  • i, iii and iv
  • iii and ii only
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

The Correct Option is C

Solution and Explanation

Human beings have four blood groups - A, B, AB and O. The blood groups are determined by two types of antigens present in the surface coating of red blood cells - A and B. The antigens occur on oligosaccharide rich head region of a glycophorin. Blood group A persons have antigen A, group B have antigen B, AB have both antigens while blood group O persons do not carry any antigen in the coating of their erythrocytes. ABO blood group system in human beings is an example of dominance, co-dominance and multiple alleles. Blood group A and B show dominance, co-dominance is shown by blood group AB. In AB blood group, alleles for blood group $A (I^A )$ and blood group $B(I^B)$ are codominant, so characterised by both antigens. Multiple allelism is shown by ABO blood group as blood group is controlled by three alleles, only two of which are present an an individual.
Was this answer helpful?
0
0

Concepts Used:

Non-Mendelian Genetics

The term - non-mendelian inheritance refers to any pattern of heredity in which features do not separate according to Mendel's laws. These principles describe how features linked with single genes on chromosomes in the nucleus are passed down through generations.

Types of Non-Mendelian Inheritance

Codominance Inheritance

It is a form of incomplete dominance in which both alleles for the same feature are expressed in the heterozygote at the same time. For example, the MN blood types of humans.

Incomplete Dominance

In a heterozygote, the dominant allele does not always completely cover the phenotypic expression of the recessive gene, resulting in an intermediate phenotype which is referred to as "incomplete dominance”.