Subject: *takes the bait*
Author:
Posted on: 2009-05-20 22:17:00 UTC

*isn't sure how to start with this*

I may be mildly incoherent in this explanation, so if I'm unclear, do ask.

Um, okay. Genes. Right.

Genes are lengths of DNA. DNA is read from one end to the other, so they have to be in the right order to work correctly. DNA condenses into chromosomes, which come in pairs. Each member of a pair has the same genes (well, theoretically, but we won't go into crossing over and mutations and things here) because they are copies of each other. So you have two copies of each gene.

There may be two or more slightly different versions of a gene - these are called alleles. It is alleles that are either dominant or recessive, not genes.

So, the way I interpret what you're talking about is that the ATA gene has two alleles - dominant (= can use Ancient tech) and recessive (= can't use it). If someone is homozygous dominant (that is, they carry two dominant alleles), they have the 'strong' expression of the gene (= phenotype). If they are a heterozygote (have one copy of each allele) they have a more moderate expression. Someone who is homozygous recessive is not able to use Ancient tech - they are a 'normal' human. As is the case with blue eye colour, it is very possibly for the recessive allele to be more common in a population.

The promoter gene would be heritable in the same way, and the MAG gene as well.

Basically her theory follows, but with the modification that genes themselves are not dominant or recessive; that it is their different forms that are :)

Or at least, it works enough for fiction - a real geneticist, which I am not, would most likely kick up at the details, but then again, they'd probably kick up about Ancient technology and about magic as well :P

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