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Only if it's a disease that has to do with genes located in the Y chromosome. Sex-linked diseases are mostly passed on from mothers to sons, such as hemophilia and daltonism.
They can, including hemophilia, which is almost always fatal for them. Its just much rarer since the Y chromosome is best thought of as a crippled X.
hink it would be true bcoz the gene of that chromosome doesnt have the ability of producing that hormone massively & this ability will be conducted to next generation durins mitosis but this percentage would not be 100% because that gene character may recessive
No, it is not true that all genes show simple patterns of dominant and recessive alleles. When Mendel did his studies on peas, he was lucky in that the genes he worked with showed those patterns. Many genes are much more complex and often involve more than one gene. Many genes show intermediate expressions between dominant and recessive.
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With one copy will be a carrier but not have a the disorder
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an allele that is not expressed when paired with a dominant allele. Only expressed when paired with another recessive allele.