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8 May, 03:37

Interestingly, even though hemophilia in the royal families began in England, they were actually the only one of these four families to NOT be affected by it. If Alice's daughter Alix had accepted a marriage proposal from George V, this may have changed history greatly. If we were to rewrite history, pairing Alix and George V together, what is the probability any of their offspring would have hemophilia?

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  1. 8 May, 04:29
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    Alice's daughter Alix = X X * George V = XY Progeny are; XX, XY, X*X, X*Y 50 % males would be infected 50% male normal50% female normal, 50 female carrier.

    Explanation:

    Hemophilia is an inherited disease and it follows an X-linked recessive pattern. The genes for hemophilia disease are located on the X chromosome. In males one mutated copy of the chromosome X is sufficient to cause the condition, because male contain only one gene. Female contain XX chromosome, so both the chromosome must have mutated for causing this disease.

    According to study of Queen Victoria (1891-1901) of England, Alice's daughter Alix was X linked carrier and George V was normal male,

    so if they got married, their children would be

    parents genotype X X * XY

    progeny

    XX, XY, X*X, X*Y

    50% males would be infected

    50% male normal

    50% female normal,

    50 female carrier.
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