asked 116k views
4 votes
Galactosemia is an inherited disorder in humans. A person with the disorder cannot digest the sugars in milk. The allele for normal digestion (G) is dominant; the allele for galactosemia (g) is recessive. A female who is heterozygous for the galactosemia trait and a male who has galactosemia have a child. Explain how this disorder can be passed on in the family. In your response, be sure to:

Identify the genotypes of the mother and father
Describe the probability that the child will inherit galactosemia

asked
User Linh
by
8.6k points

2 Answers

1 vote

Answer:

plato answer

heterozygous

homozygous dominant

Step-by-step explanation:

answered
User Abhishek Ghosh
by
8.7k points
1 vote

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

Galactosemia is an inherited metabolic disorder caused by changes, or mutations, in both copies of an individual’s GALT gene. In the majority of cases, children with galactosemia do not have parents with galactosemia. Mother and father separately are a silent carrier of the condition, which is expressed in the child (autosomal recessive inheritance).

Each individual has two copies of the GALT gene – one from father and one from mother. In case of any changes of these genes (mutations) that prevents the gene from working correctly. In order to inherit galactosemia, it is necessary for a child to have two GALT gene changes. In case of one GALT gene change there is no galactosemia.

Infants with galactosemia may be identified through newborn screening programs or by symptoms that present during the first few weeks of life. Untreated infants develop liver and kidney disease, cataracts in their eyes, and serious infections.

answered
User Tantalum
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8.0k points
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