Biology, asked by harshnims2701, 11 months ago

Why are few genetic disorders controlled by dominant alleles?

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Answered by Anonymous
0

The answer could be approached from the opposite end, i.e. why abnormal recessive alleles are more common in gene pool rather than an abnormal dominant allele?

It is true that genetic disorders are mostly controlled by recessive alleles rather than domonant ones.

Please note that double dose of recessive alleles cause the corresponding genetic disorder, but a single dose of dominant abnormal allele is enough to cause a disease.

Chances of appearance of an affected individual with double recessive condition is definitely less (maximum 25% when two carriers sexually reproduce), though the recessive allele can be passed on from generation to generation without being expressed, hence detected by nature!

Let us take example of Ashkenazi jews: number of carriers of an allele responsible for TAY SACHS disease is unusually high in their population: 1 in every 27; but number of children born with Tay Sachs in this community is about 1 in every 3600 births.

An affected child suffers due to destruction of neurons in CNS and generally die before completing five years of life. With death of the child, alleles get rejected by nature: but carriers can still silently pass on the wrong form of gene through generations (because natural selection works on normal phenotype, not on genotype where abnormal alleles could be deceitfully loaded).

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