A man has a disease caused by a dominant allele. The mother has the disease but the father does not, explain how we know the man is heterozygous for this disease.

So first we must gather the informaton, the disease is caused by a dominant allele, we may call this 'D', the recessive could therefore be 'd'. The mother has the disease, but the father does not. Therefore the mother must carry the dominant allele, she may be 'D, D' or 'D, d'. The father must be 'd,d' , carrying both recessive alleles otherwise he would have the disease. 

One can then draw out two punnet squares, with both of the mother's possible genotypes. (I can show this using the whiteboard). When you do this you will find that the son must be heterozygous otherwise he would not display the disease, and we know from the question that he has the disease.

LC
Answered by Lucas C. Biology tutor

3342 Views

See similar Biology GCSE tutors

Related Biology GCSE answers

All answers ▸

Explain how it is possible for two parents without blue eyes (a recessive trait) to have a child with blue eyes


In terms of ecological pyramids, how can pyramids of numbers sometimes be a different shape from pyramids of biomass, even for the same food chain?


How does transcription work?


What is the difference between genotype and phenotype?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2026 by IXL Learning