Skip to main content
Medline Book to support NIHPA logoLink to Medline Book to support NIHPA
. 2005 Oct 6:1–17. doi: 10.1895/wormbook.1.24.1

Complementation.

Karen Yook
PMCID: PMC4781631  PMID: 18023121

Abstract

Mutations in many genes can result in a similar phenotype. Finding a number of mutants with the same phenotype tells you little about how many genes you are dealing with, and how mutable those genes are until you can assign those mutations to genetic loci. The genetic assay for gene assignment is called the complementation test. The simplicity and robustness of this test makes it a fundamental genetic tool for gene assignment. However, there are occasional unexpected outcomes from this test that bear explanation. This chapter reviews the complementation test and its various outcomes, highlighting relatively rare but nonetheless interesting exceptions such as intragenic complementation and non-allelic non-complementation.


Full text of this article can be found in Bookshelf.

RESOURCES