Polygenic and Monogenic Inheritance
Polygenic and Monogenic Inheritance
Polygenic and Monogenic Inheritance
The traits that are determined by polygenic inheritance are not simply an
effect of dominance and recessivity, and do not exhibit complete
dominance as in Mendelian Genetics, where one allele dominates or
masks another. Instead, polygenic traits exhibit incomplete dominance so
the phenotype displayed in offspring is a mixture of the phenotypes
displayed in the parents. Each of the genes that contributes to a polygenic
trait, has an equal influence and each of the alleles has an additive
effect on the phenotype outcome.
Because of the inheritance mode patterns, the physical traits that are
controlled by polygenic inheritance, such as hair color, height and skin
color, as well as the non-visible traits such as blood pressure, intelligence,
autism and longevity, occur on a continuous gradient, with many variations
of quantifiable increments.
Skin Color: The pigment melanin is responsible for dark coloration in the
skin and there are at least three genes, which control for human skin color.
Using a hypothetical example where the production of melanin is controlled
by contributing alleles (denoted here as A, B and C), resulting in dark skin
color, and therefore light skin color is produced by non contributing
alleles (denoted here as a, b and c), it is possible to see how the spectrum
of different skin colors can result in the offspring.
The skin tones which are least likely to occur are those resulting from
entirely homozygous genotypes. The lightest skin tone, 0 (aabbcc), which
lacks any alleles contributing melanin pigment, or the darkest skin tone, 6
(AABBCC), which contains all possible contributing alleles; each of these
phenotypes occurs at a probability of 1/64.
Monogenic and polygenic inheritance are two types of inheritance by which offspring
get genetic information from their parents. According to Mendelian genetics, each
gene has two alleles that determine the character, and these alleles segregate
independently during gamete formation to produce a distinct character.