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alleles

An allele is a variant form of a gene that occupies the same position, or locus, on homologous chromosomes. At a given locus, different alleles arise mainly by mutation and contribute to genetic variation in a population. In diploid organisms, individuals typically carry two alleles for each gene—one inherited from each parent. If both alleles are identical, the organism is homozygous at that locus; if they differ, it is heterozygous.

Alleles can affect phenotype in different ways. Some alleles are dominant, masking the effect of recessive

Alleles may be neutral, deleterious, or advantageous depending on the environment. The sickle-cell allele HbS is

Evolutionary forces shape allele frequencies over time. Mutation introduces new alleles; natural selection, genetic drift, gene

alleles
in
heterozygotes,
while
others
show
incomplete
dominance
or
codominance,
in
which
both
alleles
influence
the
phenotype.
A
well-known
example
of
codominance
is
the
AB
blood
type,
where
both
IA
and
IB
alleles
are
expressed.
The
ABO
system
also
illustrates
multiple
alleles
at
a
single
locus,
with
IA,
IB,
and
i
as
common
variants;
combinations
such
as
IAIB
produce
type
AB,
IAi
or
IBi
produce
A
or
B,
and
ii
produces
type
O.
a
notable
example
of
how
a
single
gene
variant
can
have
different
fitness
effects
in
different
contexts.
Population-level
variation
often
involves
many
alleles
at
a
locus,
a
phenomenon
called
polymorphism.
flow,
and
population
structure
alter
their
frequencies,
influencing
heritable
variation
and
adaptation.