Marfan's Syndrome
Hereditary spherocytosis
Neurofibromatosis
There are several others, but those are 3 good examples.
Autosomal dominant, Autosomal recessive, X-linked recessive and X-linked dominant
autosomal dominant.......... i think
Yes
Chromosomes can be divided into autosomes and sex chromosomes. The sex chromosomes (eg X and Y in humans) carry genes concerned with sex determination. The remaining chromosomes are called autosomes. They carry genes which are the same in males and females. Aberrations are changes or mutations in the chromosomes. So autosomal aberrations are mutations in the non-sex chromosomes.
No. The gene that causes Huntington's is caused by an autosomal dominant mutation, and one form of inherited Parkinson's is also caused by an autosomal dominant mutation.
When the gene is dominant and the traits are autosomal.
autosomal dominant
Huntington's Disease is an Autosomal Dominant Trait, meaning that only one parent needs to pass the disease for the offspring to inherit it.
Autosomal dominant
There is two answers, it is autosomal dominant showing incomplete dominace
autosomal dominant
Progeria is autosomal dominant.
No, it is autosomal dominant.
It is an autosomal recessive trait.
Autosomal dominant, Autosomal recessive, X-linked recessive and X-linked dominant
Tay-sachs is autosomal.
glaucoma is inherited in an autosomal dominantpattern.which is dominant.