Carrier: Difference between revisions

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A carrier is an organism that carries a disease without showing any signs or symptoms. If the disease is genetic, the carrier will be heterozygous, with a [[Dominant_allele|dominant]], healthy [[Allele|allele]] and a [[Recessive_alleles|reccessive allele]] for the disease state. In the event of two carriers mating, there is a 25% chance their offspring will be affected by the disease, 50% chance of the offspring being carriers too or a 25% chance of the offspring being healthy and not a carrier.
A carrier is an organism that carries a disease without showing any signs or symptoms. If the disease is genetic, the carrier will be heterozygous, with a [[Dominant allele|dominant]], healthy [[Allele|allele]] and a [[Recessive alleles|reccessive allele]] for the disease state. In the event of two carriers mating, there is a 25% chance their offspring will be affected by the disease, 50% chance of the offspring being carriers too or a 25% chance of the offspring being healthy and not a carrier.  


An example of this is [[Cystic_Fibrosis|Cystic Fibrosis]], where 1 in 25 of the white population are carriers of the CF gene, showing no signs of having CF themselves.
An example of this is [[Cystic Fibrosis|Cystic Fibrosis]], where 1 in 25 of the white population are carriers of the CF gene, showing no signs of having CF themselves.  


A Punnett Square showing two carriers mating: (H is healthy, dominant allele, h is recessive for disease state)
A [[Punnett Square|Punnett Square]] showing two carriers mating: (H is healthy, [[Dominant_allele|dominant allele]], h is [[Recessive_alleles|recessive]] for disease state)  


{| width="200" border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"
{| width="200" border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"
|-
|-
|  
|  
| H
| H  
| h
| h
|-
|-
| H
| H  
| HH
| HH  
| Hh
| Hh
|-
|-
| h
| h  
| Hh
| Hh  
| hh
| hh
|}
|}

Revision as of 01:15, 17 October 2014

A carrier is an organism that carries a disease without showing any signs or symptoms. If the disease is genetic, the carrier will be heterozygous, with a dominant, healthy allele and a reccessive allele for the disease state. In the event of two carriers mating, there is a 25% chance their offspring will be affected by the disease, 50% chance of the offspring being carriers too or a 25% chance of the offspring being healthy and not a carrier.

An example of this is Cystic Fibrosis, where 1 in 25 of the white population are carriers of the CF gene, showing no signs of having CF themselves.

A Punnett Square showing two carriers mating: (H is healthy, dominant allele, h is recessive for disease state)

H h
H HH Hh
h Hh hh