Kouji Yamamoto1* and Sadao Tomizawa2
When genes area unit on separate chromosomes, or terribly way apart on identical chromosomes, they assort severally. That is, once the genes go in gametes, the gene received for one sequence does not have an effect on the gene received for the opposite. during a double heterozygous organism (AaBb), this ends up in the formation of all 444 attainable varieties of gametes with equal, or 25%, percent, frequency. Why is that this the case? Genes on separate bodys assort severally thanks to the random orientation of homologous chromosome pairs throughout meiosis. Homologous chromosomes area unit paired chromosomes that carry identical genes, however could have totally different alleles of these genes. One member of every homologous combine comes from associate organism's momma, the opposite from itspop.
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Journal of Biometrics & Biostatistics received 3496 citations as per Google Scholar report