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Suppose that in unicorns, two autosomal loci interact to determine the type of tail. One locus controls whether a tail is present at all. The allele for a tail, T, is dominant over the allele for no tail, t. If a unicorn has a tail, then alleles with an unknown dominance relationship at a second locus determine whether the tail is curly or straight. Define the alleles for tail texture as US for a straight tail and UC for a curly tail.

User GKi
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1 Answer

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Step-by-step explanation:

As you can see in the picture below, this is a dihybrid cross with a twist.

We can accomplish that mutually parentages are heterozygotes for both characters because the genotypes are

9 unicorns with curly tails (shown in green)

3 with straight tails (shown in red)

3 curly tales trait carriers with no tail (shown in dark blue)

1 straight tail trait carriers with no tail ( shown in light blue)

If this was an ordinary case of the dihybrid cross, we would get a 9:3:3:1 phenotype ratio.

However, since the first trait, the presence of the tail, is affecting the other trait, the trait texture, the ratio is altered.


(1)/(4) of the offspring (genotypes tt C_ and tt SS) has no tail, therefore we cannot observe the texture of the tail (some of the tailless individuals have Curly alleles -blue squares marked with green, some of them have Straight alleles -blue square marked with red ).

Therefore, the altered ratio is
(1)/(2) curly tails,
(1)/(4) straight tales,
(1)/(4) tailless

User Lior Cohen
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