Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

146 ■ CHAPTER 08 Chromosomes and Human Genetics


GENETICS


parents, are genetic carriers of the disorder;
they carry the disorder allele (a) but do not
have the disease.
If two carriers of a recessive genetic disorder
have children, the patterns of inheritance are
the same as for any other recessive trait. Each
child, male or female, has a 25 percent chance of
not carrying the disorder allele (genotype AA),
a 50 percent chance of being a carrier (geno-
type Aa), and a 25 percent chance of inheriting
the disorder (genotype aa). Zoe did not beat
the odds.
These percentages reveal one way in which
lethal recessive disorders such as cystic fibrosis
can persist in the human population. Although
homozygous recessive individuals (with geno-
type aa) often die before they are old enough
to have children, carriers (with genotype Aa)
are not harmed by the disorder. In a sense, the
a alleles can hide in heterozygous carriers, and
those carriers are likely to pass the disorder
allele to half of their children. An estimated one
in 29 European Americans has a mutated CFTR
gene. Recessive genetic disorders can also arise
in the human population because new mutations
can produce new copies of the recessive alleles.

Deadly with One Allele


Cystic fibrosis is an example of a recessive genetic
disorder, in which a child, like Zoe, inherits two
recessive copies of a disorder allele. A more rare
type of inherited disease is a dominant genetic
disorder, caused by an autosomal dominant allele
(A). In this case, the allele that causes a disorder
cannot “hide” in the same way that a recessive allele
can: AA and Aa individuals get the disorder; only
aa individuals are symptom-free (Figure 8.13).
Dominant genetic disorders are more rare than
recessive disorders because a dominant disorder
often produces serious negative effects immedi-
ately upon birth, and individuals with the A allele
may not live long enough to reproduce. Hence, few
people with a dominant genetic disorder pass the
allele on to their children.
For this reason, most cases of a dominant
genetic disorder are produced by a new muta-
tion in a generation. For example, achondropla-
sia, a form of dwarfism, is caused by a mutation

Aa Aa

Eggs

Sperm

Affected
child

Carrier
child

A


A


AA Aa

Aa aa

a

a A

A


a

a

×


Noncarrier
child

Carrier
child

Parents (carriers)

Gamete
production

Figure 8.12


Inheritance of cystic fibrosis, an
autosomal recessive disorder
The patterns of inheritance for a human autosomal
recessive genetic disorder are the same as for
any recessive trait (compare this figure with
the pattern shown by Mendel’s pea plants in
Figure 7.5). Recessive disorder alleles are denoted
a. Dominant, normal alleles are denoted A. Here,
the parents are a carrier female (genotype Aa)
and a carrier male (genotype Aa). M

Q1: Which of the children in this Punnett
square represents Zoe? What is her genotype?

Q2: If Zoe’s parents had another child, what is
the probability that the child would have cystic
fibrosis? That the child would be a CF carrier?

Q3: If Zoe is able to have a child of her own
someday, and the other parent is not a carrier
of cystic fibrosis (he would likely be tested
before they chose to have children), what is
the probability that the child would have cystic
fibrosis? That the child would be a carrier?
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