A woman with red-green color-blindness has a mother with normal vision.
Knowing that color-blindness is a sex-linked recessive gene, can you determine what her father's phenotype is? (yes or no)
If so, what is it?
The woman marries a man with normal vision. What is the probability they will have sons who are red-green color-blind?
What is the probability they will have daughters who are red-green color-blind?
A woman with red-green color-blindness has a mother with normal vision.
Green-weakness partial color blindness, or deuteranomaly, is a sex-linked recessive trait. The green-weakness allele, g, is recessive to the allele for normal color vision, G. Another form of abnormal vision is total color blindness which is due to an autosomal gene, t, which is recessive to its counterpart allele, T, for normal vision. A man with a normal phenotype marries a woman with green-weakness partial color blindness. Both individuals are heterozygous for autosomal color blindness. What phenotypes and phenotypic frequencies...
Red-green color blindness is inherited as an X-linked recessive (Xc). If a color-blind man marries a woman who is heterozygous for normal vision, what would be the expected phenotypes of their children with reference to this character? In your answer, specify in your phenotype descriptions the gender of the children. (For example, don’t just say 75% of the children would be colorblind – you would instead say 100 % of the daughters would be colorblind and 50% of the sons...
Red-green color blindness is a sex-linked trait, with the normal vision phenotype being dominant (C) and the color blind (c) phenotype being recessive. If you are male and your father is color blind, what is the chance (expressed as a percentage) that you will inherit his trait for color blindness? What if your mother is a carrier for color blindness (but your father is not color blind), what is the chance of you being color blind? Make sure...
SEX-LINKED TRAITS 8. Create a Punnett square to determine the offspring that would result from a cross between a woman with normal vision, who carries the allele for color-blindness, and a man who has normal vision. Note: color-blindness is an X-linked recessive tret What are the genotypes of the parent? List all possible genotypes of the offspring. male, normal male, color-blind female, normal vision female, carrier 50% Co hat percentage of their sons would be color-blind? What percentage of their...
Red-green color blindness is X-linked recessive. A woman with normal color vision has a father who is colorblind. The woman has a child with a man with normal color vision. What is the probability their child is a boy and is colorblind? A. 1/8 B. 1/4 C. 1/2 D. 3/4 E. 0
SEX-LINKAGE Red-Green color-blindness is sex-linked X-linked recessive trait. A normal sighted woman whose father is color- blind marries a color-blind man. they have 20 children. Of those 20, 6 are normal sighted females, 5 are color-blind females, 4 are normal sighted males and 5 are color-blind males. 7. What are the genotypes of the parents and all the children? 8. Theoretically, what would be the genotypic and phenotypic ratios of the offspring?
A woman is phenotypically normal but her father had the sex-linked recessive condition of red-green color blindness. If she marries a man with normal vision, what is the probability that their two children will both have normal vision? 4/9 1/16 3/4 9/16 3/8
Color-blindness is an X-linked recessive condition. A man with normal vision and a woman who is color-blind have a child with Turner Syndrome. This child has normal vision. Where did the non-disjunction occur? In meiosis I of the mother In meiosis II of the mother In meiosis I of the father In meiosis II of the father In either meiosis I or II of the mother.
3. Colour-blindness is a X-linked, recessive trait. If a normal-sighted woman, whose father was colour-blind, marries a colour-blind man, what is the probability that they will have a son who is colour-blind? (use the letter "B") 4. A man and woman, both of normal vision, have: 1) a colour-blind son (#1) who has a daughter of normal vision 2) a daughter (#1) of normal vision who has one colour-blind son and one normal vision son 3) another daughter (W2) of...
Suppose color blindness is a X linked trait in humans. It is also recessive. A phenotypically normal woman has a father with color blindness. This woman marries a man with normal vision. What is the chance of their children being color blind? What is the chance of their daughters being color blind?