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phenotype
phe·no·type P0241600 (fē′nə-tīp′)n.1. a. The observable physical or biochemical characteristics of an organism, as determined by both genetic makeup and environmental influences.b. The expression of a specific trait, such as stature or blood type, based on genetic and environmental influences.2. An individual or group of organisms exhibiting a particular phenotype. phe′no·typ′ic (-tĭp′ĭk), phe′no·typ′i·cal (-ĭ-kəl) adj.phe′no·typ′i·cal·ly adv.phenotype (ˈfiːnəʊˌtaɪp) n (Biology) the physical and biochemical characteristics of an organism as determined by the interaction of its genetic constitution and the environment. Compare genotype phenotypic, ˌphenoˈtypical adj ˌphenoˈtypically advphe•no•type (ˈfi nəˌtaɪp) n. 1. the observable constitution of an organism. 2. the appearance of an organism resulting from the interaction of the genotype and the environment. Compare genotype. [< German Phänotypus (1909); see pheno-, -type] phe`no•typ′ic (-ˈtɪp ɪk) phe`no•typ′i•cal, adj. phe`no•typ′i•cal•ly, adv. phe·no·type (fē′nə-tīp′) The physical appearance of an organism as distinguished from its genetic makeup. The phenotype of an organism depends on which genes are dominant and on the interaction between genes and environment. Compare genotype.phenotypeThe physical appearance of organism that results from the interaction between a genotype and the environment.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | phenotype - what an organism looks like as a consequence of the interaction of its genotype and the environmentphysical composition, composition, make-up, makeup, constitution - the way in which someone or something is composed | Translations
phenotype
phenotype (fē`nətīp'): see geneticsgenetics, scientific study of the mechanism of heredity. While Gregor Mendel first presented his findings on the statistical laws governing the transmission of certain traits from generation to generation in 1856, it was not until the discovery and detailed study of the ..... Click the link for more information. .phenotype see GENOTYPE (AND) PHENOTYPE.Phenotype those features of the structure and vital activity of an organism that are caused by the interaction of the organism’s genotype with the environment. The term “phenotype” was introduced by the Danish geneticist W. Johannsen in 1909. In a broad sense, it denotes the aggregate of the manifestations of a genotype (the genetic constitution of an organism), and in a narrower sense, the individual characters (phenes) controlled by specific genes. The concept of pheno-types has been extended to include all the characters of an organism, beginning with the primary products of gene activity—the ribonucleic acid (RNA) molecules and polypeptides—and ending with external structural features, physiological processes, and behavior. On the level of the primary products of gene activity, the relationship between the genotype of an organism and the organism’s phenotype is clear-cut: to each sequence of nucleotides in a molecule of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) there corresponds a specific sequence of nucleotides in a molecule of RNA and, correspondingly, a specific sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide (protein) chain. However, the sequence of the nucleotides in DNA, that is, the DNA’s primary structure, determines only the structure of the RNA and the proteins that it synthesizes; it determines neither the time of the synthesis nor the quantity of the primary products. An analogy is the manner in which a typecasting matrix determines the contents of a text but not the time of its printing or the number of copies printed. On the other hand, the time when specific genes become activated, and the intensity of their transcription, depend both on the preceding activity of other genes and on a complex of intracellular and environmental factors. On higher levels of biological organization, that is, those of cells, tissues, organs, systems of organs, and the organism as a whole, the interaction between the genotype and phenotype is still more complex. Each character then results from the interaction of the products of many genes; the interaction, in turn, depends on the specific environmental conditions. This is particularly evident in the study of quantitative characters. To this end, Johannsen conducted research on the weight of seeds from several self-pollinating (genetically homogeneous) strains of bean plants. He discovered that the seeds of plants belonging to the same genotype varied in weight, that is, they had different phenotypes. It has also been established that the limits of mutability in the weight of seeds from different strains often overlap: the same phenotype may correspond to different genotypes. At the same time, among different strains grown under identical conditions there are stable congenital variations in the average weight of the seeds. However, even the average weight of the seeds in each strain may vary according to environmental conditions, for example, the plants’ nutrition. Consequently, the roles played by heredity and environment in the formation of characters may differ greatly. Quantitative characters that have important practical applications in agriculture and medicine are studied by specialized biometric methods that analyze the heritability of characters. REFERENCESJohannsen, W. L. O nasledovanii v populiatsiiakh i chistykh liniiakh. Moscow-Leningrad, 1935. (Translated from German.) Lobashev, M. E. Genetika. Leningrad, 1967.V. I. IVANOV
Phenotype in linguistics, a concrete unit of language in the totality of its form and content, for example, a word or sentence. The phenotype is used and distinguished in speech in opposition to an abstract ideal unit, the genotype, from which a variety of phenotypes derive. The distinction between phenotype and genotype corresponds to that between surface and deep level in generative grammar (seeGRAMMAR, FORMAL). Various phenotypes may be related to a single genotype (phenotype synonymy), or various genotypes may be related to a single phenotype (phenotype homonymy). The transition from genotype to phenotype is governed by transformational rules (seeTRANSFORMATIONAL GRAMMAR). The concept of the phenotype may also be applied at the phonological level, where the phenotype is the phoneme—the concrete realization in speech of the genotype. The concepts of phenotype and genotype make it possible to distinguish phenotypic and genotypic languages as two stages in generative grammar. In comparative historical linguistics, an analogy to this distinction is the concept of a protolanguage, seen as a genotype in relation to real languages, which are regarded as phenotypes. Another meaning of the term “phenotype” was introduced by B. L. Whorf to denote grammatical categories having formal expression in speech, as opposed to those that do not (cryptotypes). In English, number is a phenotype, and gender is a cryptotype. V. A. VINOORADOV phenotype[′fē·nə‚tīp] (genetics) The observable characters of an organism, dependent upon genotype and environment. phenotype the physical and biochemical characteristics of an organism as determined by the interaction of its genetic constitution and the environment phenotype
phenotype [fe´no-tīp] 1. the outward, visible expression of the hereditary constitution of an organism.2. an individual exhibiting a certain phenotype; a trait expressed in a phenotype. adj., adj phenotyp´ic.phe·no·type (fē'nō-tīp), The observable characteristics, at the physical, morphologic, or biochemical level, of an individual, as determined by the genotype and environment. [G. phainō, to display, + typos, model] phenotype (fē′nə-tīp′)n.1. a. The observable physical or biochemical characteristics of an organism, as determined by both genetic makeup and environmental influences.b. The expression of a specific trait, such as stature or blood type, based on genetic and environmental influences.2. An individual or group of organisms exhibiting a particular phenotype. phe′no·typ′ic (-tĭp′ĭk), phe′no·typ′i·cal (-ĭ-kəl) adj.phe′no·typ′i·cal·ly adv.phenotype Genetics 1. Any observable or identifiable structural or functional characteristic of an organism.2. The sum of the structural/physical and functional–biochemical, and physiologic characteristics of an organism, defined by genetics, modified by the environment. See Bombay phenotype, Mutation, Null phenotype, Para-Bombay phenotype, Swarmer cell phenotype, Trait. Cf Genotype.phe·no·type (fē'nō-tīp) Manifestation of a genotype or the combined manifestation of several different genotypes. The discriminating power of the phenotype in identifying the genotype depends on its level of subtlety; thus, special methods of detecting carriers distinguish them from normal subjects from whom they are inseparable on simple physical examination. Phenotype is the immediate cause of genetic disease and object of genetic selection. [G. phainō, to display, + typos, model]phenotype 1. The observable appearance of an organism which is the result of the interaction of its genetic constitution and its subsequent environmental experience. 2. Any identifiable structural or functional feature of an organism. Compare GENOTYPE. phenotype the observable features of an individual organism that result from an interaction between the GENOTYPE and the environment in which development occurs. The interaction is that between nature and nurture. Variations due to nature are the inherited aspects of the organism, the genotype, while nurture denotes the (usually not inherited) effects of the environment upon the organism. Sometimes two different genotypes give the same phenotype due to DOMINANCE (1) masking a recessive ALLELE. It is true to say however, that the closer we look at the effect of an allele the more likely we are to detect a special phenotype unmasked by dominance. For example, an allele may code for a nonfunctional enzyme and thus be hidden in a heterozygote (classifying the allele as recessive) but its effects may be detected by such methods as ELECTROPHORESIS, which can identify different forms of a protein. Phenotype1) The entire physical, biochemical, and physiologic makeup of an individual, as opposed to genotype. 2) The expression of a single gene or gene pair.Mentioned in: Human Leukocyte Antigen Testphenotype The observable characteristics (e.g. eye colour, height) of an individual that are the result of an interaction between the genes and the environment. See expressivity; genotype.phe·no·type (fē'nō-tīp) Observable characteristics, at physical, morphologic, or biochemical levels of an individual. [G. phainō, to display, + typos, model]Patient discussion about phenotypeQ. Can anyone with experience help me to know what the clinical phenotype of autism is? I am new to the medical field and I have been here for 3 months. Can anyone with experience help me to know what the clinical phenotype of autism is?A. I welcome you to my favorite choice. This field is really very satisfying while we serve others for their good. Because of the similarities and differences among people with different forms of autism, health care professionals now view autism as having a broader clinical phenotype than was once thought. The expanded phenotype goes beyond the standard definition for autism, to include, as the DSM-IV states, a range of impairments rather than the absolute presence or absence of a certain behavior or symptom (DSM 1994).The DSM-IV uses the terms “pervasive developmental disorder (PDD)” and “autism spectrum disorder (ASD)” to describe five variations of autistic behavior; the International Classification of Disease (ICD), published by the World Health Organization (WHO) , has eight variations of PDD. More discussions about phenotypephenotype
Words related to phenotypenoun what an organism looks like as a consequence of the interaction of its genotype and the environmentRelated Words- physical composition
- composition
- make-up
- makeup
- constitution
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