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What Are The Odds Of My Daughter's Son Being Colour-Blind
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I have pprobably known more colour-blind people than most would expect to meet in a lifetime: my maternal grandfather was colour-blind, as is my elder brother, the only one of my parents' five male offspring to be affected. My husband was also colour-blind, as is the elder of his two brothers. Neither of my two children has manifested the gene, but now my daughter is expecting a son, and I'm curious as to his chances of inheriting it - not worried, mind, just curious.
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one half
the chance is that child will be colour blind is 1/2
standard assumptions - that the colour blindness is red green and that there is no new mutation
wading thro the script - the grandfather of the new baby is colour-blind. Then all his daughters are obligate carriers.
grandad is X(c) Y and all the daughters have to take on the X(c) colour blind gene and chromosome from their father and get the other X gene from their mums in order to be gurlz (XX)
The daughter is now gonna have a son ( the propositus)
His makeup is gonna be XY - the Y from the dad ( think about it) and the X from the mum where there is a choice of two = X and X(c)
so one half will be X(c) Y and will be colour blind sons
and one half will be the other X XY - not colour blind and not carrying it
I thenk yew
The incidence is 8% and doesnt die out in families as far as I know or any loss is balanced by new mutation so the rate stays the same.
and this must mean that there is an evolutionary advantage to being co;our blind in our society
You can see froo camouflage they say - and so colour blind hunters are more successul .... that is what some people say
the chance is that child will be colour blind is 1/2
standard assumptions - that the colour blindness is red green and that there is no new mutation
wading thro the script - the grandfather of the new baby is colour-blind. Then all his daughters are obligate carriers.
grandad is X(c) Y and all the daughters have to take on the X(c) colour blind gene and chromosome from their father and get the other X gene from their mums in order to be gurlz (XX)
The daughter is now gonna have a son ( the propositus)
His makeup is gonna be XY - the Y from the dad ( think about it) and the X from the mum where there is a choice of two = X and X(c)
so one half will be X(c) Y and will be colour blind sons
and one half will be the other X XY - not colour blind and not carrying it
I thenk yew
The incidence is 8% and doesnt die out in families as far as I know or any loss is balanced by new mutation so the rate stays the same.
and this must mean that there is an evolutionary advantage to being co;our blind in our society
You can see froo camouflage they say - and so colour blind hunters are more successul .... that is what some people say
Peter - You have overlooked the colour blindness on SpanishFly's side of the family. There is a 50% chance that she is a carrier. Adding this to your analysis, there is a 75% chance of the grandson being colour blind. Of course, the two sides of the family may have different forms which could affect the analysis.
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