The correct option is D Gene I has three alleles IA,IB and i, and all these alleles are found in every individual, which gives blood type to the individual
Mendel suggested factors (genes) have two forms or variants but there are many genes in a population that contain more than two different alternative forms(alleles). Alleles are responsible for differences in the phenotypic expressions for a character.
Two important examples of multiple alleles in human beings are ABO blood group system and human leukocyte-associated antigen (HLA). The ABO blood group system in humans is due to the three alleles of the gene I. I stands for “isohemagglutinin”, The gene (I) has three alleles- IA,IB, and i (or IO). Multiple allelism is the property of a population, not an individual organism, for example, human beings are diploid in nature, so among the three alleles for the blood type, a particular individual can have only two of the alleles in the particular locus of the chromosome.
When both IA and IB come together in the chromosome, they express their phenotype codominantly.
GenotypeBlood GroupIAIAAIAIOAIBIBBIBIOBIAIBABIOIOO
The alleles IA,IB and i are the multiple alleles of the same gene coding for the blood type, and it is a phenomenon of a population, not an individual, one individual shows any two of the alleles and not all the three.