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Mendelian Inheritance . for freshers. Mendelian inheritance. There are two alleles of a gene on different sister chromosomes. Dominant alleles trump recessive alleles phenotypically (what they look like…).
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Mendelian Inheritance for freshers
Mendelian inheritance There are two alleles of a gene on different sister chromosomes. Dominant alleles trump recessive alleles phenotypically (what they look like…). Disorders can be linked to a dominant allele or a recessive allele, which can be on an autosomal or sex-linked chromosome.
Autosomal dominant Vertical inheritance: present in every generation Both sexes equally affected and likely to pass on Unaffected individuals produce normal offspring Affected individuals produce 50% affected children
Autosomal recessive Horizontal inheritance: skips generations Both sexes equally affected and likely to pass on Affected individuals produce 50% carriers Carriers produce 50% carriers
X-linked dominant Affected males produce normal males and affected females Affected females produce 50% affected offspring Affects both sexes, but usually more females since males die before birth
X-linked recessive Affects mainly males Affected males are usually born from unaffected parents Disease is usually transmitted by a female carrier No male-male transmission
Y-linked Affects males only Affected male produces all affected males
Complications to Mendelian inheritance • Genomic imprinting • Differential expression depending on parental origin (i.e. is either maternal or paternal) • E.g. Prader-Willie, Angelman • Polygenic inheritance • Condition affected by many genes at different loci • Varying clinical presentations • Multi-factorial disorder • Disorder due to a combination of genetic and environmental factors • Mitochondrial inheritance • Inherited from female only, DNA in mitochondria