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Haploinsufficiency

Haploinsufficiency in genetics describes a model of dominant gene action in diploid organisms, in which a single copy of the standard (so-called wild-type) allele at a locus in heterozygous combination with a variant allele is insufficient to produce the standard phenotype. Haploinsufficiency may arise from a de novo or inherited loss-of-function mutation in the variant allele, such that it produces little or no gene product (often a protein). Although the other, standard allele still produces the standard amount of product, the total product is insufficient to produce the standard phenotype. This heterozygous genotype may result in a non- or sub-standard, deleterious, and (or) disease phenotype. Haploinsufficiency is the standard explanation for dominant deleterious alleles. Haploinsufficiency in genetics describes a model of dominant gene action in diploid organisms, in which a single copy of the standard (so-called wild-type) allele at a locus in heterozygous combination with a variant allele is insufficient to produce the standard phenotype. Haploinsufficiency may arise from a de novo or inherited loss-of-function mutation in the variant allele, such that it produces little or no gene product (often a protein). Although the other, standard allele still produces the standard amount of product, the total product is insufficient to produce the standard phenotype. This heterozygous genotype may result in a non- or sub-standard, deleterious, and (or) disease phenotype. Haploinsufficiency is the standard explanation for dominant deleterious alleles. In the alternative case of haplosufficiency, the loss-of-function allele behaves as above, but the single standard allele in the heterozygous genotype produces sufficient gene product to produce the same, standard phenotype as seen in the homozygote. Haplosufficiency accounts for the typical dominance of the “standard” allele over variant alleles, where the phenotypic identity of genotypes heterozygous and homozygous for the allele defines it as dominant, versus a variant phenotype produced by only by the genotype homozygous for the alternative allele, which defines it as recessive.

[ "Phenotype", "Mutation", "NCOA5", "Pitt–Hopkins syndrome", "9q Subtelomeric Deletion Syndrome", "Retinoic acid induced 1", "Langer mesomelic dysplasia" ]
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