A colour blind man marries a woman with normal sight who has no

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 Multiple Choice QuestionsMultiple Choice Questions

11.

The incorrect statement with regard to haemophilia is

  • It is a sex - linked disease

  • It is a recessive disease

  • It is dominant disease

  • It is dominant disease

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12.

If both parents are carriers for thalassemia, which is an autosomal recessive disorder, what are the chances of pregnancy resulting in an affected child?

  • No Chance

  • 50%

  • 25%

  • 25%

1480 Views

13.

Which enzyme/s will be produced in cell in which there is a non-sense mutation in the lac Y gene?

  • beta - galactosidase

  • Lactose permease

  • Transacetylase

1089 Views

14.

A gene showing codominance has:

  • One allele dominant on the other

  • alleles tightly linked on the same chromosome

  • alleles that are recessive to each other

  • alleles that are recessive to each other

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15.

The term "linkage" was coined by

  • T.H. Morgan

  • T. Bover

  • G. Mendel

  • G. Mendel

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16.

In the following human pedigree, the filled symbols represent the affected individuals. Identify the type of given pedigree. 

  • Autosomal dominant

  • X-linked recessive

  • Autosomal recessive

  • Autosomal recessive

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17.

A colour blind man marries a woman with normal sight who has no history of colour blindness in her family. What is the probability of their grandson being colour blind?

  • 0.5

  • 1

  • Nil

  • Nil


C.

Nil

When a colour blind (XCY) marries to a woman with normal sight (XX) who has no family history of colour blindness, all of their sons will be normal pure and all of their daughters will be carriers as shown below:


So in the next generation, the children of all of their son will be normal in all conditions(except the case in which the wife involved is not carrier neither colour blind). For carrier daughters.
(i) If they many to a normal man 50% of their grandsons will become colour blind as


(ii) If carrier daughter marries to a colour blind man 50% of their grandson will be colour blind along with 50% of the grand daughter while rest 50% of the grand daughters will be carriers as

So in both the above cases, the result shows 50% of grand sons will be colour blind which in terms of over all progress (son + daughter) comes as 25% thus confirming the probability as 0.25.


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18.

In his classic experiments on pea plants, Mendel did not use

  • Seed colour

  • Pod length

  • Seed shape

  • Seed shape

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19.

Fruit colour in squash is an example  of 

  • recessive epistasis

  • dominant epistasis

  • complementary genes

  • complementary genes

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20.

A normal-visioned man whose father was colour-blind, marries a woman whose father was also colour-blind. They have their first child as a daughter. What are the chances that this child would be colour-blind?

  • 100%

  • 0%

  • 25%

  • 25%

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