im not sure u guess plz thx man
No because AA and SS create the genotype AS :)
No, an AAA and SS combination can only produce an Aa genotype. The offspring will inherit one allele from each parent, resulting in a heterozygous genotype. For an AAA genotype to be produced, both parents must have the same alleles for the specific gene.
It is not possible. NO
There are three outcomes if a person with an AS genotype marries a person with another AS genotype. The offspring has a 50 percent chance of inheriting the AS genotype, and a 25% chance of having a child with an AA or SS genotype. Most couples who share the AS genotype choose not to procreate.
You cannot do a cross to determine the genotypes of individuals because there is only one gene here. Genotype consists of the entire genetic makeup of the individual, which cannot be determined by a single gene. Only the alleles S or s is used to express this particular gene. If you're looking for a monohybrid cross between Ss and Ss, while separately wanting a result between ss and ss, then the answers are as follows: Ss x Ss 25% SS 50% Ss 25% ss ss x ss = 100% ss
First child will always prevail from being SS. Some even have AA, but most of the time. Its AS.
If an AC genotype man and an AS genotype woman marry, each of their children has a 25% chance of being born with a sickle cell disease (SS genotype), a 50% chance of being a carrier like their parents (AS genotype), and a 25% chance of having a normal genotype (AA).
No, AA and SS cannot give birth to AA offspring. In this scenario, there would be a 50% chance of producing AS offspring (heterozygous) and a 50% chance of producing SS offspring (homozygous recessive).
25% The four possibilities are aa as as ss
The blood test is called a hemoglobin electrophoresis test, which is used to determine an individual's hemoglobin genotype. A result of 'AA' indicates normal hemoglobin, 'AS' indicates sickle cell trait (carrier), and 'SS' indicates sickle cell disease.
"Ss" refers to a genotype, representing the genetic makeup of an individual for a specific trait. The genotype "Ss" indicates that the individual carries one dominant allele (S) and one recessive allele (s) for that particular trait. The phenotype, on the other hand, is the observable physical or physiological expression of the genotype, which may vary depending on the dominance relationships between the alleles.
Mm, Ff, Gg, Ll, Ss and ect