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SEX LIMITED AND SEX INFLUENCED Characteristics
Typology: Study notes
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Sex-influenced characteristics: Beard in goats
Sex-influenced characteristics are traits that are encoded by genes located on the autosomes (non-sex chromosomes) but are expressed differently depending on the sex of the individual. In other words, these traits are influenced by the sex hormones present in the body.
Sex-influenced characteristics are determined by autosomal genes and are inherited according to Mendel’s principles, but they are expressed differently in males and females. In this case, a particular trait is more readily expressed in one sex; in other words, the trait has higher penetrance in one of the sexes.
For example, the presence of a beard on some goats is determined by an allele at an autosomal locus (B b) that is dominant in males and recessive in females. In males, a single beard allele is required for the expression of this trait: both the homozygote (B b^ Bb) and the heterozygote (B b^ B+^ ) have beards, whereas the B +^ B+^ male is beardless. In contrast, females require two beard alleles in order for this trait to be expressed: the homozygote B b^ Bb^ has a beard, whereas the heterozygote (B b^ B+^ ) and the other homozygote (B +^ B+^ ) are beardless.
The key to understanding the expression of the beard allele is to look at the heterozygote. In males (for which the presence of a beard is dominant), the heterozygous genotype produces a beard, but in females (for which the absence of a beard is dominant), the heterozygous genotype produces a goat without a beard.