Want this question answered?
Yes, extra or missing chromosomes result in abnormal phenotypes. SomeÊcommon examples of this areÊDown's Syndrome and certain kinds of intersex.
A genetic desiese is your chromosomes or genes aren't how they are supposed to be. For example if someone has 47 chromosomes instead of 46 then they have a genetic disorder.
damaged virus particles used to prevent disease?
Sex chromosomes themselves are unique, because of the large differences in the X and Y chromosomes. Their loci (location of genes) do not match up and the Y chromosome is much smaller. With sex-linked (X-linked or Y-linked) traits, oftentimes the genotype only consists of one allele because no form of the gene exists on the other chromosome. For this reason, males are more prone to these genetic diseases. One copy of a recessive disease-causing gene is enough to be expressed. In females, there is a chance that the other copy is dominant and not disease-causing.
demyelinating disease: multiple sclerosis, catastrophe, and cerebral palsy.
No, the Huntington's disease is inherited from either the mother or father. It's genes not a lack of chromosomes.
In recent discoveries, 18 specific chromosomes are affected because of Parkinson's Disease. These chromosomes are numbered in chronological order.
Disease damaged the potato crop in Ireland.
Yes, extra or missing chromosomes result in abnormal phenotypes. SomeÊcommon examples of this areÊDown's Syndrome and certain kinds of intersex.
Liver cirrhosis is one such disease.
If you have celiac disease then it will damage your small intestine.
Lamprey Disease
it can damaged our tissue
Smoking.
12 th chromosome
down syndrome
cancer