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Question 6
In fruit flies, a gene for body colour has a dominant allele for grey body, G, and a recessive allele for black body, g. A gene for eye colour has a dominant allele ... show full transcript
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In Figure 4, flies numbered 3 and 4 produce fly numbered 9, which is black-bodied. This indicates that the parental flies must have at least one grey-bodied parent, demonstrating that the grey body allele is dominant over the black body allele.
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In Figure 4, fly numbered 5 is a grey-bodied male and produces both grey-bodied and black-bodied offspring (numbered 9 and 10) with a female that must carry the recessive allele for black body. If body colour were on the X chromosome, we would not observe male offspring with different body colours.
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Phenotypes of parents: Grey-bodied, white-eyed female × Black-bodied, red-eyed male. Genotypes of parents: .
Genotypes of offspring: .
Phenotypes of offspring: Grey-bodied, white-eyed; Grey-bodied, red-eyed; Black-bodied, white-eyed; Black-bodied, red-eyed.
Ratio of phenotypes: 1:1:1:1.
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Given that 64% of the flies are grey-bodied, it indicates that they include both homozygous dominant () and heterozygous () flies. Using the Hardy-Weinberg equation, we have: Let be the frequency of the dominant allele (G) and the frequency of the recessive allele (g); thus, , where is the homozygous dominant proportion, is the heterozygous proportion, and is the homozygous recessive proportion.
Here, , therefore, . The percentage of heterozygous flies (2pq) is calculated as: So, the percentage of heterozygous flies is .
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