Dominant Epistasis :
(i) It is a gene interaction in which two alleles of a gene at one locus interfere and suppress or mask the phenotypic expression of a different apir of alleles of another gene at another locus.
(ii) The gene that suppresses or masks the phenotypic expression of a gene at another locus is known as epistatic.
(iii) The gene whose expression is interfered by non-allelic genes and prevents from exhibiting its character is known as hypostatic.
(iv) When both the genes are present together, the phenotype is determined by the epistatic gene and not by the hypostatic gene.
(v) In the summer squash the fruit colour locus has a dominant allele 'W' for white colour and a recessive allele 'w'w for coloured fruit. 'W' allele is dominant that masks the expression of any colour.
(vi) In another locus hypostatic allele 'G' is for yellow fruit and its recessive allele 'g' gor green fruit. In the first locus the white is dominant to colour where as in the second locus yellow is dominant to green.
(vii) When the white fruit with genotype WW gg is crossed with yellow fruit with genotype ww GG, the `F_(1)` planst have white fruit and are heterozygous (WwGg). When `F_(1)~ heterozygous plants are crossed they give tise to `F_(2)` with the phenotypic ratio of 12 white : 3 yellow : 1 green.
(viii) Since W is epistatic to the alleles 'G' and 'g', the white which is dominant, makes the effect of yellow or green.
(ix) Homozygous recessive ww genotypes only can give the coloured fruits `(4//16)`. Double recessive 'wwgg' will give green fruit `(1//16)`.
(x) The plants having only 'G' in its genotype (wwGg or ww GG) will give the yellow fruit `(3//16)`
