Sickle cell anemia is an autosomal recessive disorder. It can result from two carriers having a child together.
Sickle cell anemia is an autosomal recessive disease. Carriers have sickle cell trait, which confers resistance to malaria.
recessive
domaint
Heterozygous induviduals pass the dominant and recessive alleles to offspring
Heterozygous individuals pass the dominant and recessive alleles to offspring.
The disease is recessive, requiring both parents to carry the allele for the disease to be found in the offspring. If one parent has it, the offspring can also be a carrier, but it will be recessive, and the offspring will have normal RBC (red blood cells)
Yes, if the sickle cell trait were a dominant trait, it could still be a form of balanced polymorphism. In a dominant scenario, individuals with one copy of the allele would express the trait. In this case, heterozygous individuals would have the sickle cell trait, potentially providing a selective advantage against malaria, similar to how carriers of the recessive trait do in the current situation.
sickle cell is an autosomal recessive disorder
SS,Ss
Sickle cell anemia is genetic. It is an autosomal recessive disease.
sickle cell anemia is caused by a recessive allele. so for it to affect someone, it means that the person must have received both recessive alleles from their parents. Being a carrier means that you have the recessive allele from one of your parents, but you have a normal dominant allele from the other parent, that means you are not affected by it but you are carrying it.
autosomal recessive