15. When two mutants having the same phenotype were crossed, the progeny obtained showed a wild-type phenotype. Thus the mutations are
(1) non-allelic.
(2) allelic.
(3) segregating from each other.
(4) independently assorting
Explanation
When two mutants with the same mutant phenotype produce a wild-type phenotype progeny when crossed, it indicates:
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The mutations lie in different genes (non-allelic).
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Each mutant provides a functional copy of the gene lacking in the other, so together they complement one another and restore the wild-type phenotype.
This test is known as a complementation test and is used to distinguish whether mutations are:
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Allelic (same gene): cross yields mutant offspring.
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Non-allelic (different genes): cross yields wild type offspring.
Option-wise analysis
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Non-allelic – correct
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Mutations in different genes complement each other, producing wild-type progeny.
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Matches the given scenario.
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Allelic
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Different mutations of the same gene fail to complement; progeny show mutant phenotype. Not correct here.
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Segregating from each other
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Segregation pertains to inheritance patterns, not allelism; not directly related to interpretation of complementation test results.
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Independently assorting
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Applies to genes located on different chromosomes or far apart on the same chromosome but does not specifically describe allelism or complementation outcomes.
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So, since the mutants complement and progeny are wild type, the mutations are non-allelic (option 1).


