Case 2: Polycystic Kidney Disease (dominant lethal allele) Maria is 38 years old. She and her husband Joe have 4 children. Maria has been diagnosed with polycystic kidney disease. She learns that cysts developing in her kidneys have damaged them severely. The damage will continue until the kidneys stop functioning. Maria faces dialysis and will eventually need a kidney transplant. Maria is tested for the allele that causes the disease and learns that her form of the disease is caused by a dominant mutation on chromosome 16. Maria is heterozygous for the trait. Her husband is confirmed to be homozygous recessive. Maria's children offer the best hope of a match for a future kidney donation but must be free of the harmful allele. 5. What is the probability of Maria and Joe's children inheriting this dominant harmful allele? Solve a Punnett Square to estimate this probability. Show your work below. INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE There are some situations in which the two alleles of a gene produce a "blended" effect in a heterozygous individual. Because neither allele is dominant over the other, capital and lowercase letters cannot be used as symbols. One of denoting alleles showing incomplete dominance is to designate both with a capital letter with a superscript or apostrophe added to one - such as A and A'. For this example of gene "A" then, this case of incomplete dominance has 3 possible phenotypes, one each for the genotypes AA, AA' and A'A'. Case 1: Delta 32 and the AIDS virus Stephen Crohn is a gay man whose partner was the 5 person in the U.S. to die from AIDS. In spite of his exposure to the virus, Crohn has never shown any signs of the disease. Dr. O'Brien of the National Institute of Health found that Crohn's resistance is due to a mutation called delta 32. It results in the blocking of a membrane channel through which HIV enters white blood cells. Inheriting two copies of delta 32 (D'D') provides exceptional/complete resistance to HIV. The heterozygous condition (DD') delays the onset of AIDS after initial infection because there are half the number of membrane passageways as are present in a person who is homozygous normal which slows down the rate of viral replication. The heterozygous genotype (DD') can therefore be described as giving modest/partial resistance. The DD genotype provides no resistance to AIDS. Both of Stephen Crohn's parents were heterozygous for the delta 32 mutation. Stephen's genotype became known after his unexpected resistance to HIV. 6. In the cross between Stephen's parents, what would have been the probability for one child between them of having Stephen's homozygous genotype? Solve a Punnett Square to estimate this probability. Show your work below.

Biology (MindTap Course List)
11th Edition
ISBN:9781337392938
Author:Eldra Solomon, Charles Martin, Diana W. Martin, Linda R. Berg
Publisher:Eldra Solomon, Charles Martin, Diana W. Martin, Linda R. Berg
Chapter16: Human Genetics And The Human Genome
Section16.3: Genetic Diseases Caused By Single-gene Mutations
Problem 7LO: State whether each of the following genetic defects is inherited as an autosomal recessive,...
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Case 2: Polycystic Kidney Disease (dominant lethal allele)
Maria is 38 years old. She and her husband Joe have 4 children. Maria has been
diagnosed with polycystic kidney disease. She learns that cysts developing in her kidneys
have damaged them severely. The damage will continue until the kidneys stop
functioning. Maria faces dialysis and will eventually need a kidney transplant. Maria is
tested for the allele that causes the disease and learns that her form of the disease is
caused by a dominant mutation on chromosome 16. Maria is heterozygous for the trait.
Her husband is confirmed to be homozygous recessive. Maria's children offer the best
hope of a match for a future kidney donation but must be free of the harmful allele.
5. What is the probability of Maria and Joe's children inheriting this dominant
harmful allele? Solve a Punnett Square to estimate this probability. Show your
work below.
INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE
There are some situations in which the two alleles of a gene produce a "blended" effect
in a heterozygous individual. Because neither allele is dominant over the other, capital
and lowercase letters cannot be used as symbols. One of denoting alleles showing
incomplete dominance is to designate both with a capital letter with a superscript or
apostrophe added to one - such as A and A'. For this example of gene "A" then, this
case of incomplete dominance has 3 possible phenotypes, one each for the genotypes
AA, AA' and A'A'.
voice
Case 1: Delta 32 and the AIDS virus
Stephen Crohn is a gay man whose partner was the 5 person in the U.S. to die from
AIDS. In spite of his exposure to the virus, Crohn has never shown any signs of the disease.
Dr. O'Brien of the National Institute of Health found that Crohn's resistance is due to a
mutation called delta 32. It results in the blocking of a membrane channel through which
HIV enters white blood cells. Inheriting two copies of delta 32 (D'D') provides
exceptional/complete resistance to HIV. The heterozygous condition (DD') delays the
onset of AIDS after initial infection because there are half the number of membrane
passageways as are present in a person who is homozygous normal which slows down
the rate of viral replication. The heterozygous genotype (DD') can therefore be
described as giving modest/partial resistance. The DD genotype provides no resistance
to AIDS. Both of Stephen Crohn's parents were heterozygous for the delta 32 mutation.
Stephen's genotype became known after his unexpected resistance to HIV.
6. In the cross between Stephen's parents, what would have been the probability
for one child between them of having Stephen's homozygous genotype?
Solve a Punnett Square to estimate this probability. Show your work below.
Focus 80
ENG
4x
Transcribed Image Text:Styles Editing Case 2: Polycystic Kidney Disease (dominant lethal allele) Maria is 38 years old. She and her husband Joe have 4 children. Maria has been diagnosed with polycystic kidney disease. She learns that cysts developing in her kidneys have damaged them severely. The damage will continue until the kidneys stop functioning. Maria faces dialysis and will eventually need a kidney transplant. Maria is tested for the allele that causes the disease and learns that her form of the disease is caused by a dominant mutation on chromosome 16. Maria is heterozygous for the trait. Her husband is confirmed to be homozygous recessive. Maria's children offer the best hope of a match for a future kidney donation but must be free of the harmful allele. 5. What is the probability of Maria and Joe's children inheriting this dominant harmful allele? Solve a Punnett Square to estimate this probability. Show your work below. INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE There are some situations in which the two alleles of a gene produce a "blended" effect in a heterozygous individual. Because neither allele is dominant over the other, capital and lowercase letters cannot be used as symbols. One of denoting alleles showing incomplete dominance is to designate both with a capital letter with a superscript or apostrophe added to one - such as A and A'. For this example of gene "A" then, this case of incomplete dominance has 3 possible phenotypes, one each for the genotypes AA, AA' and A'A'. voice Case 1: Delta 32 and the AIDS virus Stephen Crohn is a gay man whose partner was the 5 person in the U.S. to die from AIDS. In spite of his exposure to the virus, Crohn has never shown any signs of the disease. Dr. O'Brien of the National Institute of Health found that Crohn's resistance is due to a mutation called delta 32. It results in the blocking of a membrane channel through which HIV enters white blood cells. Inheriting two copies of delta 32 (D'D') provides exceptional/complete resistance to HIV. The heterozygous condition (DD') delays the onset of AIDS after initial infection because there are half the number of membrane passageways as are present in a person who is homozygous normal which slows down the rate of viral replication. The heterozygous genotype (DD') can therefore be described as giving modest/partial resistance. The DD genotype provides no resistance to AIDS. Both of Stephen Crohn's parents were heterozygous for the delta 32 mutation. Stephen's genotype became known after his unexpected resistance to HIV. 6. In the cross between Stephen's parents, what would have been the probability for one child between them of having Stephen's homozygous genotype? Solve a Punnett Square to estimate this probability. Show your work below. Focus 80 ENG 4x
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