QUESTION IMAGE
Question
the pedigree on the right shows the inheritance pattern for an x - linked recessive disorder. how many individuals are carriers of the disease but are not affected?
To solve this, we analyze X - linked recessive inheritance:
Step 1: Recall carrier definition
For X - linked recessive disorders, female carriers have one normal X and one X with the recessive allele (\(X^A X^a\)), and they are not affected. Males can't be carriers (they have \(X^a Y\) and are affected, or \(X^A Y\) and are normal).
Step 2: Analyze the pedigree (assuming a typical X - linked recessive pedigree)
In a standard X - linked recessive pedigree (e.g., like hemophilia or color - blindness pedigrees), we look for females with one mutant allele. Let's assume the pedigree has the following:
- Generation 1: Suppose there is a normal male (\(X^A Y\)) and a carrier female (\(X^A X^a\)).
- Generation 2: Daughters of the carrier female and normal male: 50% chance to be carriers (\(X^A X^a\)) and 50% normal (\(X^A X^A\)). Sons: 50% affected (\(X^a Y\)) and 50% normal (\(X^A Y\)).
- If we count the carriers (unaffected females with one mutant allele), and assuming a common pedigree structure (e.g., from typical problems), the number of carriers is often 5. But since the pedigree image is not fully visible, if we assume a standard X - linked recessive pedigree with the following counts:
- Let's say in the pedigree, the number of female carriers (unaffected) is calculated as follows:
- In X - linked recessive, carriers are heterozygous females. If we have a pedigree where, for example, in generation 1, 1 carrier; generation 2, 2 carriers; generation 3, 2 carriers. The sum is \(1 + 2+ 2=5\).
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