From kragen@dnaco.net Fri Aug 21 10:44:16 1998
Date: Fri, 21 Aug 1998 10:44:15 -0400 (EDT)
From: Kragen <kragen@dnaco.net>
To: systalk@ml.org
Subject: Re: [ST] AH HA!
In-Reply-To: <35D4DCC2.9A6CD77D@ifl.edu>
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On Sat, 15 Aug 1998, Storck Marc wrote:
> Joshua E. Rodd wrote:
> > (Incidentally, if I had children, 1 out of 4 would have the effect
> > passed
> > on. If I married someone who also had the disease, then all the children
> > would have the effect. Does that mean we would all be nice looking? =)
> 
> So your disease is on the X-chromosom and it is no dominant, that's the only
> possibility for a 1 of 4

If it were sex-linked, on the X-chromosome, and not dominant, then it
would explain his second comment -- that marrying someone who also
expressed the trait would result in all the children expressing the
trait -- but not the first, because either no children would expressing
the trait (if he married someone who didn't have the gene at all), or
half of the children of both sexes would (if he married someone who had
the gene.)

If it were not sex-linked and not dominant, then either none of his
children (with a partner without the gene) or one-fourth of them (with
a partner who had the gene, but didn't express it) would express the
trait if his partner did not express the trait, and (again) all of his
children would express the trait if his partner also expressed the
trait.

If it were sex-linked and on the Y chromosome, it would never be
expressed in women, so it would be impossible for him to marry someone
who also had the disease, but no matter who he married, all of his sons
would express the trait.  (Y-chromosome traits are neither dominant nor
recessive under normal circumstances, since only XYY-syndrome sufferers
(about 1 in 2000 people) have two different Y chromosomes.)

If it were sex-linked, on the X chromosome, and dominant, then it would
be expressed in none of his sons (unless they got it from their mother)
but all of his daughters.

If it were not sex-linked, but were dominant, then there would be two
possibilities for his genotype and three for his mate's, which would
mean six total possibilities: if either Joshua or his wife had it on
both genes, then all of their children would express the trait (which
covers four of the six possibilities); if they both had it on one gene
(which would mean they both expressed it) then three-fourths of their
children would express the trait; if Joshua had it on one gene, but his
wife had it on neither gene, than half of their children would express
the trait.

In short, none of the scenarios match what Joshua said -- unless he
plans to have children with lots of different mothers, which I doubt.

Kragen


