How is recessive epistasis different from duplicate recessive epistasis?

In classical Mendelian genetics, one gene controls one trait. But in real life, many traits are controlled by two or more genes and sometimes one gene can affect or interfere with the expression of another gene. This interaction is called epistasis. Here, we will compare two types: recessive epistasis and duplicate recessive epistasis. Both involve two genes, but the way they interact is different.

Recessive Epistasis

Recessive epistasis occurs when the recessive alleles of one gene (in homozygous form) can mask or suppress the effect of another gene. In this case, the second gene can be dominant or recessive, but its expression will not appear if the first gene is homozygous recessive.

This means one gene (called the epistatic gene) is stronger and can block the phenotype controlled by the second gene (called the hypostatic gene), but only when present in recessive form.

Example:

A good example is coat colour in mice. One gene (A) controls pigment production. If the mouse has at least one dominant allele A, pigment is produced. The second gene (B) controls the pigment type (black or brown). But if the mouse has genotype aa, no pigment is produced, so the coat is white. Here, gene A is epistatic to gene B. Even if B is dominant (BB or Bb), it cannot show its effect if A is aa.

The typical F2 phenotypic ratio in recessive epistasis is 9:3:4.

Duplicate Recessive Epistasis

Duplicate recessive epistasis is also called complementary gene interaction. Here, both genes are equally important and both must have at least one dominant allele to show the trait. If either gene is homozygous recessive, the phenotype will not be expressed.

This means the recessive allele of any one gene can block the full expression of the trait. Both genes work together to complete the biochemical pathway that produces the phenotype.

Example:

A well-known example is flower colour in sweet pea plant (Lathyrus odoratus). Here, gene C and gene D are both required for purple flower colour. If any of these genes is in homozygous recessive condition (cc or dd), the plant will have white flowers. Only when both genes have at least one dominant allele (meaning at least one C and one D allele), the plant will produce purple flowers. In this case, both cc and dd act as epistatic forms. 

The typical F2 phenotypic ratio in duplicate recessive epistasis is 9:7, where 9 plants have purple flowers and 7 have white flowers.






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