Autosomal Recessive Inheritance
Autosomal recessive inheritance is marked by
the primary feature that two copies of an altered gene located on one
of the autosomes (that is, not the X or Y chromosomes) must be
present for an individual to be affected with the trait or condition
determined by that gene.
-
An
affected individual (homozygote) has two parents who are unaffected
but each parent carries the altered gene (heterozygote).
- The risk of two heterozygotes, or carriers, having an affected
child is 25%, 1 in 4, for each child that they have; similarly,
there is a 3 in 4 chance that each child will not be affected .
- Males and females are at equal risk for being affected.
- Two affected individuals usually produce children all of whom are
affected as well.
In addition to the basic interpretation of an autosomal recessive
pedigree, Bayesian analysis can refine
risk assessment by taking into account the full family and clinical
information.
Last updated Monday, February 26, 2001.
© 2001 by Fiddler and Pergament, All rights reserved.