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Published byAllan Gaines Modified over 9 years ago
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Recall: Autosome - any chromosome other than the X & Y (humans have 22 pairs of autosome + 1 pair of sex chromosomes)
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Most affected children have unaffected parents Heterozygotes (carriers) are unaffected
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Tay - Sachs Disease More common among Jewish populations Young children begin showing signs of slowed development Severe impairment and death Build up of lipids in the body – lysosomes do not function properly
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Cystic Fibrosis More common in Caucasians Mucus in respiratory tract, difficulty breathing Extreme salty sweat Mucus may cause secondary infections
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Phenylketonuria (PKU) Lack enzyme for normal metabolism Phenylalanine builds up and causes brain damage Newborns are routinely tested Changes in diet lead to normal life
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Sickle Cell Disease More common in Africans (African-Americans) Causes blood to be sickle shaped Affects oxygen flow to organs, causing weakness, pain, anemia, etc Heterozygotes are resistant to malaria
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Affected children usually have an affected parent Heterozygotes are effected Two heterozygotes (Hh x Hh) can produce a normal (hh) child
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Huntington Disease Neurological disorder, progressive degeneration of the brain Symptoms appear later in life (40s, 50s)
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Achondroplasia Common form of Dwarfism Short arms and legs, normal torso Homozygotes (AA) do not survive
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Achondroplasia
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Hypercholesterolemia Incomplete dominance Caused by a recessive allele, however in the heterozygous form (Hh), individuals have 2x the normal blood cholesterol levels
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