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How many different phenotypes can be produced by a pair of codominant alleles?

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User Dynde
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

Three

Step-by-step explanation:

Codominant alleles are those alleles that when ars togehter in the genotype (heterozygous) are expressed simultaneously. An example of codominant alleles are those for the AB blood types: when allele for A and allele for B are together in heterozygous, both are expressed in phenotype. Another two possible phenotypes produced by this pair of codominant alleles are A blood type (when two A alleles are in homozygous genotype) and B blood type (when two B alleles are in homozygous genotype).

answered
User Roland Roos
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8.2k points
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