× Didn't find what you were looking for? Ask a question
Top Posters
Since Sunday
w
3
w
3
e
3
3
r
3
b
2
M
2
V
2
f
2
c
2
c
2
K
2
New Topic  
Ilovehim Ilovehim
wrote...
Posts: 23
Rep: 0 0
11 years ago
Emma suffers from colorblindness, a recessive X-linked disorder. She has a brother who is NOT affected. What do we know of the parents?
A) The mother is a carrier, father is colorblind
B) Both parents are carriers (they're not colorblind)
C) Both parents are colorblind
D) The father is a carrier, the mother is not.

Serious answers only please, if you don't know please don't answer. Thanks!
Read 372 times
4 Replies

Related Topics

Replies
wrote...
11 years ago
Should be B
wrote...
11 years ago
A - the mother is a carrier and the father is color blind.

It looks like this girl inherited the X chromosome with the allele from her mother and the other from her colour-blind father (as he has no other X chromosome).


Hope that Helps
#8
wrote...
11 years ago
A) The mother is a carrier, the father is colorblind.

--For Emma (a girl) to have colorblindness, she would have to inherit two faulty versions of the X chromosome, meaning one has to come from mom and one has to come from dad.
--We know the father has a faulty X chromosome. Males are hemizygous for X, meaning they only have one copy, and therefore whatever the have will show up despite being recessive. The father MUST be colorblind.
--We know the mother has to have at least one faulty X, so to know the rest you look at the brother. He is NOT colorblind, meaning the X he inherited is fine. He inherits his Y from dad, so the X MUST come from mom.
--THEREFORE, the mother has one good X and one busted one, meaning she is a carrier and not colorblind while the father is colorblind.
wrote...
11 years ago
The father determines whether or not the offspring will be colorblind, as he contributes either the 'X' or the 'Y'.

To be colorblind, a girl needs the gene for colorblindness from BOTH PARENTS, meaning BOTH PARENTS need to give her an 'Xc'.

Emma gets one 'Xc' from her mother, and one 'Xc' from her father--this means her father HAS TO HAVE THE GENE FOR COLORBLINDNESS ON HIS X, meaning he HAS TO BE COLORBLIND. This eliminates choices B and D (he is not just a carrier, he is colorblind).

However, since her brother is not, this means the 'X' he received from his mother does NOT have the gene for colorblindness, meaning his mother is JUST A CARRIER (she did have one Xc, which she passed on to Emma, but Emma's brother got the X which was not affected).

This means choice A is correct--their mother is a carrier, and their father is colorblind.

Hope this helped you understand!
New Topic      
Explore
Post your homework questions and get free online help from our incredible volunteers
  643 People Browsing
Related Images
  
 155
  
 1644
  
 366