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AP Biology 2.2 Essential Life Process Information. What is the probability that their son will have hemophilia?
Transcript
- 00:04
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by hemophiliacs. [red blood cells travelling quickly]
- 00:08
They're a never-ending buffet for vampires everywhere. [man in a hospital bed and vampire appears]
- 00:11
Okay, here's our question…
- 00:13
Hemophilia is an X-linked, recessive trait. A woman who is XHXh has
- 00:21
a son with a father who is XHY What is the probability that their son will
Full Transcript
- 00:27
have hemophilia? And here are our potential answers…[mumbling]
- 00:32
Okay, let's break it down… Hemophilia is an X-linked, recessive trait.
- 00:37
…What does that mean? Unfortunately, it has nothing to do with the [Two men dressed in X-men costumes]
- 00:40
X-Men. Though that sounds like a good idea for the next sequel…X-Men: Recessive Trait. [Girl watching X-Men: Recessive Trait in an empty cinema]
- 00:46
We'd watch it...just us? Anyway, X-linked means that the gene encoding
- 00:50
the trait is on the X chromosome. And remember that a recessive allele will
- 00:55
not show its phenotype if it's paired with a dominant allele.
- 00:59
So if hemophilia is X-linked and recessive, the picture looks a little more like this…
- 01:05
But what makes a sex-linked gene special, compared to all of the other genes out there? [Chromosome and gene stood together]
- 01:10
Well, besides the fact that all genes are special in their parents' eyes…
- 01:15
Sex-linked genes are exactly what the name says: sex-linked.
- 01:18
So when a mother makes her eggs, half of them will carry the diseased chromosome. [Woman with two chromosomes]
- 01:23
Now let’s take look at the father. He can either pass down a dominant allele
- 01:29
linked to the X chromosome, which would guarantee a healthy female offspring…
- 01:33
Or he could pass down a Y chromosome, guaranteeing a male offspring. [Man passing down a Y chromosome]
- 01:38
But since the hemophilia gene is on the X chromosome, a male offspring only has one [Boy opening a wrapped gift]
- 01:43
chance to get it right? And that chance comes from…?
- 01:46
Bingo. Mommy dearest. So the chances he’ll get the recessive gene
- 01:51
from his mom are… B, fifty percent.
- 01:53
That’s what makes sex-linked genes special. Because male offspring are haploid for the [Parents stood with their son]
- 01:59
X chromosome, all traits on the X chromosome, which come from the mother, are expressed. [Woman with an X chromosome]
- 02:05
Because of this, most X-linked disorders are more common in males than females.
- 02:10
Which could also explain why more of the X-Men are male than female but...don't quote us [X-Men characters in a park]
- 02:15
on that.
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