Dominant disorders can be passed onto the offspring if the dominant gene is present in the offspring.
recessive
One example is Huntington's Disease. With a recessive genetic disorder, to develop the disorder, you must inherit the gene from BOTH parents (odds, 1 in 4). With a dominant gene disorder, if you inherit the gene from ONE parent, you will develop that disorder (odds- 1 in 2).
Klinefelter Syndrome is neither recessive or dominant. It is a chormosome disorder, and is thus not passed down from generation to generation. The disorder is a random even that occurs.
Dominant definitely not dominant. It is recessive objectively and subjectively and unequivocally.
Jacobsen symptom is neither dominant nor recessive because it is not a sex-linked disorder. This disorder is a mutation, specifically a partial deletion. Part of the long arm (q) of chromosome 11 is deleted.
B is dominant and b is recessive.
Recessive
It is autosomal recessive and it is not a disorder! Cystic Fibrosis is a disease.
Progressive Retina Atrophy is a dominant genetic disorder.
It is neither recessive nor dominant because it is a chromosomal disorder and not just a problem present in a single gene.
No. Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder
Sickle cell anemia is an autosomal recessive disorder. It can result from two carriers having a child together.
Yes, Color Blindness is recessive, Not dominant. :)
yes it is, only 1 mutation to the lmna gene is sufficent for someone to express traits regarding progeria
Cystic Fibrosis is recessive. If you have one CF gene and one non-CF gene, you will be a carrier but not have CF.
Recessive, but dominant in some rare cases.
It is neither recessive nor dominant because it is a chromosomal disorder and not just a problem present in a single gene.
Alleles can be dominant or recessive