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Recessive?? (i.e., you would need to inherit one from each parent to have hemophilia)

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16y ago

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Which of the parents can pass the allele for hemophilia to a daughter?

The father is the one who can pass the allele for hemophilia to a daughter. Hemophilia is a recessive X-linked disorder, so the daughter would need to inherit the hemophilia allele from her father.


Will a heterozygous female with hemophilia have blood that will clot normally?

Yes, because Hemophilia is recessive (if you have a normal allele, you won't have hemophilia, and heterozygous means that you have one normal and one abnormal allele).


How many alleles for hemophilia do females have?

females have 2 alleles for hemophilia, (X^hX^H) and (X^hX^h) if H is the normal allele and h is the recessive allele for hemophilia


Can xHxH be hemophillia?

Yes, xHxH can represent a female carrier of hemophilia, where "H" denotes the hemophilia allele and "x" denotes the normal allele. In this case, the individual has one normal allele and one allele for hemophilia. However, a female carrier typically does not exhibit symptoms of hemophilia but can pass the allele to her offspring. Males with the genotype "xHy" (where "y" is the male chromosome) would express the condition due to having only one X chromosome.


What allele is passed to a offspring male if mother has hemophilia?

Hemophilia is typically an X-linked recessive condition. If a mother has hemophilia, she carries two copies of the hemophilia allele on her X chromosomes (since females have two X chromosomes). Therefore, any male offspring will inherit one of her X chromosomes, which will carry the hemophilia allele, leading to him being affected by the condition. The male will inherit his Y chromosome from his father, which does not carry the hemophilia gene.


What are a woman chance of being a carrier for hemophilia if she phenotypically a normal woman and has phenotypically normal parents but has a hemophiliac brother?

She has 1/2 chance. We can figure out exactly what her parents' genotypes were. Her brother has a Hemophilia allele that he got from his mom. So their mom has at least 1 Hemophilia allele. If she had 2 then she would have Hemophilia. The father cannot have a Hemophilia allele because it would have been expressed. So her chances are 1/2 because her mother has 1 Hemophiliac and 1 normal allele.


The allele for hemophilia is on the x chromosomes and is a?

Sex-linked genes


Is hemophilia caused by a dominant allele on the x chromosome true or false?

false


Hemophilia is a sex linked recessive disorder Mary does not have the disease but both of her brothers do Neither of her parents have the disease What are Marys parents genotypes indicates pr?

Mary's father is normal and has a normal genotype XY while her mother is the carrier of hemophilia and has one X of her genotype infected i.e. she is X*X.


Females who are carrier for hemophilia?

Females who are carriers of hemophilia possess one normal and one mutated allele of the gene responsible for the disorder, typically located on the X chromosome. While they often do not exhibit severe symptoms of hemophilia due to the presence of the normal allele, they can experience mild bleeding problems and have a 50% chance of passing the mutated allele to their offspring. Male children who inherit the mutated allele will be affected by hemophilia, while female children may become carriers themselves. Genetic counseling is recommended for carriers to understand the risks for future generations.


Why is hemophilia more common in males than women?

this disease is caused by a recessive allele that is found only on the x chromosome. a human female has two x chromosomes. a human male only has 1 x chromosome. therefore, a male needs only one recessives allele to have hemophilia, while a female needs two recessive allele. as a result, hemophilia is much more common in males.


How does hemophilia progress?

Hemophilia is a recessive allele condition. Men can get hemophilia alot easier than women as the allele is found on the XY Chomosome pair. With men. they do not have the extra "tail" on the Y chromosome compared to the XX with a female. If the person has the recessive allele on the X chromosome and this person is male, they will be a hemophiliac as they do not have a 'pair' allele which could be dominant to stop the condition expressing itself. On a female, if there is a recessive (hemophilia) allele on one of the X chromosomes but on the other is a Dominant (normal) allele then she will be a carrier of the faulty gene but will not suffer from the condition herself. If the female have a recessive (faulty) gene on each of the XX chromosomes, then she will be a sufferer of the disease.