An
allele
is
any
one
of
a
number
of
alternative
forms
of
the
same
gene
occupying
a
given
locus
(position)
on
a
chromosome.
An
example
is
the
gene
for
blossom
color
in
many
species
of
flower
-
a
single
gene
controls
the
color
of
the
petals,
but
there
may
be
several
different
versions
of
the
gene.
One
version
might
result
in
red
petals,
while
another
might
result
in
white
petals.
Many
organisms
are
diploid
-
that
is,
they
have
two
sets
of
homologous
chromosomes
in
their
somatic
cells,
and
thus
contain
two
copies
of
each
gene.
An
organism
in
which
both
copies
of
the
gene
are
identical
-
that
is,
have
the
same
allele
-
is
said
to
be
homozygous
for
that
gene.
An
organism
which
has
two
different
alleles
of
the
gene
is
said
to
be
heterozygous.
Often
one
allele
is
"dominant"
and
the
other
is
"recessive"
-
the
"dominant"
allele
will
determine
what
trait
is
expressed.
For
example,
in
the
case
of
blossom
color,
if
the
"red"
allele
is
dominant
to
the
"white"
allele,
in
a
heterozygous
flower
(with
one
red
and
one
white
allele),
the
petals
will
be
red.
An
exception
is
"codominance",
where
both
alleles
are
active
-
a
blending
of
traits
may
result,
e.g.
pink
petals.
A
wild
type
allele
is
an
allele
which
is
considered
to
be
"normal"
for
the
organism
in
question,
as
opposed
to
a
mutant
allele
which
is
usually
a
relatively
new
modification.