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Gene Vincent's son, Douglas Vincent, has a resemblance to his father with similar facial features and a classic rockabilly style. He has often been seen sporting a pompadour hairstyle and a strong jawline, echoing Gene's iconic look. Additionally, he has a passion for music, which aligns with his father's legacy in rock and roll.

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1w ago

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Is aaron Watson gene's son?

No, Gene's son is called Gary Wayne


What does it mean by a gene being mutated?

A mutated gene is a gene that has undergone a change in its DNA sequence. This change can alter the function of the gene, affecting how proteins are made or regulated, which can lead to differences in traits or diseases.


The brother of a women's father has hemophilia her father was unaffected but she worries that she may have an affected son should she worry explain?

The woman's father being unaffected means that he does not carry the gene for hemophilia on his X chromosome. Therefore, the woman does not have the gene and cannot pass it on to her son. Her son will not inherit hemophilia from his uncle.


Your son has blue eyes you have light brown your wife has hazel brown brown with a little green in them?

This is absolutely possible. The fact that you have brown eyes doesn't necessarily mean you only have brown eye genes. Same with your wife. This is an oversimplification, but basically: Say both your parents have brown eyes. One of them inherited brown-eye genes from both of their parents--so their genes look like this: BB, for Brown Brown. But your other parent inherited one brown gene and one blue gene. So their genes look like this: Bb, for Brown-blue. Blue is lowercase because it's recessive: someone that's got one brown gene and one blue gene is going to end up with brown eyes. Now, you're going to inherit one gene from each parent. Your BB parent can only pass on a B, because that's all they've got. But your other parent can pass on a b, making you Bb. Your eyes are still brown, but you've got a blue-eyed gene. Let's imagine that the same thing happened to your wife. In fact, if she's got green flecks in her eyes, it's pretty much a guarantee that she heterogeneous for the trait (meaning her two genes aren't the same). So her genes look like this: Bg (green is even more recessive than blue). Now there are four possibilities: You can pass on a B and your wife can pass on a B, making your son BB, or brown-eyed. You can pass on a B and your wife can pass on a g, making your kid Bg--also brown eyed, like your wife. Your wife can pass on a B and you can pass on a b--again, brown-eyed, just like you this time. The fourth option, though, is exactly what happened: you can pass on a blue gene and your wife can pass on a green gene. Since green is more recessive than blue, your son ends up with blue eyes. Note that this can be true even if I guessed your parent's eye colors wrong. You can have brown-eyed ancestors stretching back five generations and still have a recessive blue gene, because there's only a one-in-four chance that a recessive gene will show--and that's only if both parents have it. If only one parent has it, there's a 0% chance it will show because the other parent's dominant gene will always trump the recessive. Again, that's totally oversimplified. But the short answer is that yes, your son probably came by his blue eyes honestly. And on a completely not-genetics related note, how old is your son? Many babies are born with bright blue eyes that only darken to their real color later. His eyes might turn brown when he's a todler.


What does ben orr's son look like mom or dad or both?

Ben Orr's son, Ben Junior, seems to take after both his parents in terms of looks. He has features that resemble both his mom and dad, but overall has his own unique blend of their traits.