English
Noun
- In the context of "genetics": A diploid individual that has different
alleles at one or more
genetic loci.
- A bacteriophage that has two
different copies of its
genetic material and so produces two types of offspring.
Zygosity refers to the
genetic condition
of a
zygote. In genetics,
zygosity describes the similarity or dissimilarity of
DNA between
homologous chromosomes at a specific
allelic
position or
gene. The terms
homozygous, heterozygous and hemizygous are used to simplify the
description of the
genotype of a
diploid organism at a single
genetic locus. At a given gene or position along a chromosome (a
locus), the DNA sequence can vary among individuals in the
population. The variable DNA segments are referred to as alleles,
and diploid organisms generally have two alleles at each locus, one
allele for each of the two
homologous
chromosomes. Simply stated, homozygous describes two identical
alleles or DNA sequences at one locus, heterozygous describes two
different alleles at one locus, and hemizygous describes the
presence of only a single copy of the gene in an otherwise diploid
organism.
Zygosity is also used to describe the genetic
condition of the zygote(s) from which
twins emerge, where it refers to
the similarity or dissimilarity of the twins' DNA. Identical twins
are monozygotic - they develop from one zygote (one fertilized egg
that develops into two embryos). Fraternal twins are dizygotic -
they developed separately from two zygotes (two fertilized eggs).
For a description of these terms, see
twins.
Homozygous
An organism is referred to as being homozygous
(basically meaning of the same alleles) at a specific locus when it
carries two identical copies of the gene affecting a given trait on
the two corresponding
homologous
chromosomes (e.g., the genotype is PP or pp when P and p refer
to different possible alleles of the same gene). Such a cell or
such an organism is called a homozygote.
A homozygous dominant genotype occurs when a
particular locus has two copies of the dominant allele (e.g. PP). A
homozygous recessive genotype occurs when a particular locus has
two copies of the recessive allele (e.g. pp).
Pure-bred or
true
breeding organisms are homozygous. For example a homozygous
individual could have the allele combinations PP or pp. All
homozygous alleles are either allozygous or autozygous.
Allozygous
Allozygosity is when two alleles are alike, but
unrelated. The two alleles had different ancestral alleles that
through
convergent
evolution became similar.
Autozygous
Autozygosity is when two alleles are alike by
relation, that is to say since they had a common ancestor, and they
are similar.
Heterozygous
An organism is a heterozygote or is
heterozygous at a locus or gene when it has different alleles
occupying the gene's position in each of the homologous
chromosomes. In other words, it describes an individual that has 2
different alleles for a trait. In diploid organisms, the two
different alleles were inherited from the organism's two
parents. For example a
heterozygous individual would have the allele combination Pp.
Hemizygous
Hemizygous describes a diploid individual who
has only one allele of a gene or chromosome segment rather than the
usual two. A hemizygote refers to a cell or organism whose genome
includes only one allele at a given locus. For organisms where the
male is
heterogametic,
such as humans, it refers in particular to
X-linked
genes, since males normally possess only one X-chromosome. They
are hemizygous for (nearly) all genes that are located on the
X-chromosome.
In a more extreme example, male honeybees
(
Drones) are
hemizygous organisms since they develop from unfertilized eggs and
their entire genome is haploid.
Inheritance of traits
The relationship between different alleles and
the phenotypes that they affect is described in
Dominance
relationship. Some alleles are neither dominant nor recessive
to another allele. In such cases, both alleles affect the phenotype
of the heterozygote. Sometimes the result is an intermediate
phenotype, such as when a snapdragon plant producing red flowers is
crossed to one producing white flowers: the result is a
heterozygous plant producing pink flowers. This is called
incomplete dominance.
To symbolize how a gene is inherited, the
dominant allele is indicated with an upper case character and the
recessive with a lower case character. The colour of flowers in
Mendel's
inheritance experiments are often indicated as PP for the dominant
homozygote, which produces a red flower, and pp for the recessive
homozygote, which produces a white flower. When these two are
crossed, the F1 or first filial generation receives one chromosome
with the P allele from the red-flowered parent and a corresponding
chromosome with the p allele from the white-flowered parent.All of
the F1 generation are heterozygous, and this genotype is indicated
with Pp. All of the F1 plants produce red flowers, as this is the
dominant allele.
Heterozygosity
Heterozygosity refers to the state of being a
heterozygote. Heterozygosity can also refer to the fraction of loci
within an individual that are heterozygous. In
population
genetics, it is commonly extended to refer to the population as
a whole, i.e. the fraction of individuals in a population that are
heterozygous for a particular locus.
Typically, the observed(H_o) and expected(H_e)
heterozygosities are compared, defined as follows for diploid
individuals in a population:
- H_o = \frac
where n is the number of individuals in the
population, and a_,a_ are the alleles of individual i at the target
locus. H_e = 1 - \sum_^
where m is the number of alleles at the target
locus, and f_i is the
allele
frequency of the i^ allele at the target locus.
heterozygote in Czech: Homozygot
heterozygote in German: Heterozygotie
heterozygote in German: Homozygotie
heterozygote in German: Hemizygotie
heterozygote in Estonian: Heterosügootsus
heterozygote in Estonian: Homosügootsus
heterozygote in Spanish: Heterocigoto
heterozygote in Spanish: Homocigoto
heterozygote in French: Hétérozygote
heterozygote in French: Homozygote
heterozygote in Indonesian: Heterozigot
heterozygote in Indonesian: Homozigot
heterozygote in Indonesian: Hemizigot
heterozygote in Italian: Eterozigosi
heterozygote in Hebrew: הטרוזיגוט
heterozygote in Hebrew: הומוזיגוט
heterozygote in Hungarian: Heterozigóta
heterozygote in Hungarian: Homozigóta
heterozygote in Dutch: Heterozygoot
heterozygote in Dutch: Homozygoot
heterozygote in Norwegian: Homozygot
heterozygote in Japanese: ヘテロ接合型
heterozygote in Japanese: ホモ接合型
heterozygote in Polish: Heterozygota
heterozygote in Polish: Homozygota
heterozygote in Polish: Hemizygota
heterozygote in Russian: Гетерозигота
heterozygote in Russian: Гемизигота
heterozygote in Serbian: Хетерозигот
heterozygote in Serbian: Хомозигот
heterozygote in Finnish: Homotsygootti
heterozygote in Turkish:
Heterozigot