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Lyonization in individuals with Turner syndrome

As people with Turner's syndrome have XO chromosomes, does the lyonization of the single X chromosome take place in the somatic cells? Is this one of the reasons for the abnormalities associated with ...
Mel's user avatar
  • 23
0 votes
0 answers
52 views

Is it possible for a non-self antigen to NOT be recognized by the body?

The amazing diversity of antigens that the body can recognize (by virtue of T and B cells that express receptors complementary to them) is truly fascinating. The explanation mooted for this is the ...
A-big-neutron's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
43 views

Can We Determine the Cell Types Ab initio?

Is it possible to find all cell types in the human body and their respective transcriptomes by analyzing the human genome (and doing no physical experiment)? If such a thing is possible in principle, ...
Vegetable New Man's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
155 views

How many genes of an individual are homozygous?

We have 20000 to 25000 protein-coding genes. Considering an individual, how many of his\her protein-coding genes are homozygous? I am looking for an estimation of gene homozygosity ratio in human ...
MySky's user avatar
  • 2,274
9 votes
0 answers
358 views

The village of Twins — Mystery behind and Scope

With the presence of more than 200 twins, Kodinhi , a village situated in Malappuram District in Kerala , India , is popularly known as the "Village of Twins".This phenomenon of large ...
Asmi's user avatar
  • 123
0 votes
1 answer
116 views

Can the effect of an allele on height be context-dependent?

Some data is available on the effect alleles have on height. For example Common DNA Variants Accurately Rank an Individual of Extreme Height However after browsing the literature I was not able to ...
SKG's user avatar
  • 45
1 vote
1 answer
305 views

Why do humans share over 99% of their genomes?

From Wikipedia The haploid human genome (23 chromosomes) is about 3 billion base pairs long and contains around 30,000 genes.[33] Since every base pair can be coded by 2 bits, this is about 750 ...
SKG's user avatar
  • 45
1 vote
3 answers
887 views

Is it possible to fuse DNA from two sperms and can a baby be born from that? [closed]

If this is possible, then isn't there going to be a chance to have a YY child?
Aranya's user avatar
  • 19
5 votes
1 answer
695 views

Are there any phenotypically visible examples of gene linkage in humans?

Are there any examples of two "visible" or "obvious" phenotypic traits in humans that are a priori unrelated, but which tend to be inherited together (i.e. their inheritance ...
tparker's user avatar
  • 717
0 votes
1 answer
80 views

How do you determine "in which direction" DNA is shared between groups of people

In popular DNA ancestry tests you can read lines like "you have 2% neanderthal dna" or "you have 20% italian". How can you distinguish between a person having 20% italian vs ...
yolofsdfhsdfdf's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
4k views

Why is haemophilia unviable in later stages of life?

A sentence in my textbook is: The possibility of female being haemophilic is extremely rare because mother of such a female has to be at least carrier and the father should be haemophilic (unviable ...
Nandini Yadav's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
170 views

Monozygotic vs Dizygotic heteropaternal superfecundation

Update: I had a wrong assumption. After triple checking, I now see that how ordinary monozygotic twins arise is 1 sperm and 1 ovum and then later the zygote splits up. (1.1. and that that phil and ...
BCLC's user avatar
  • 93
0 votes
1 answer
52 views

Why is cognitive maturity related to organism lifespan in larger animals and mammals?

I am not a student of biology, so I should provide some context to me asking this rudimentary question. While doing a graduate-level course on Reinforcement Learning, the instructors focused on how we ...
Abhinav's user avatar
  • 153
-1 votes
1 answer
84 views

Is it true that if a human lived long enough (up to 3-400 years), he/she would eventually develop cancer?

I have just studied DNA, but I am not so clear. So, I would like you to explain it more clearly. This is what I think when a human grow older and older, his or her DNA repair mechanism would be ...
SOE's user avatar
  • 101
1 vote
1 answer
74 views

How does an antisense RNA molecule restore protein function in CF patients?

I am researching a treatment for cystic fibrosis (CF) called Eluforsen and I am trying to understand the mechanism by which an RNA molecule can restore proper protein function. In many research ...
jack's user avatar
  • 221
0 votes
0 answers
30 views

Brain evolution in the age of the caesarian

I have just been reading an account of the evolution of human intelligence in Matthew Syed’s recent book on diversity, called “Rebel Minds”. He is not the originator of this idea, but he suggests ...
Tuffy's user avatar
  • 101
1 vote
0 answers
52 views

Does intelligence depend more on environment than on genetic factors? [duplicate]

Many have argued that the test of IQ is simply a test of language. The application of the test consists of asking a number of questions. The person should understand the question presented to them and ...
BartK's user avatar
  • 11
1 vote
0 answers
64 views

Why do I have 95% of chimpanzee's DNA, and only 2% of Neanderthal's DNA? [duplicate]

Excuse me if it is a question with a simply answer, but I don't understand these discoveries, looking a discrepancy from my unknowledge of genetics: I have 95% of Chimapanzee's DNA, and, I have [...
user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
115 views

What could humans do to "see" what dogs smell?

We're able to see a lot of things using computers that we can't see normally: yellow-green, UV light, X-rays, etc. What do we have that harnesses the ability to "see" what dogs smell (e.g., harnessing ...
RoCo's user avatar
  • 41
-4 votes
2 answers
882 views

Why isn't the human zygote considered a human life how is a living anatomically modern human defined biologically? [closed]

It has 46 chromosomes by default when healthy(Differences almost always are pathological) and has almost every biological functions, processes a Newborn or and Adult person has. It even invades ...
George Ntoulos's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
100 views

is it possible for a son to inherit an allele on a Y chromosome?

Obviously, the only way for one to be male is to inherit the Y chromosome, but are there alleles on the y chromosomes? Or is it just automatically the recessive trait without an allele.
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
53 views

Understanding genetic similarity in humans [duplicate]

I was reading "Blueprint" by Robert Plomin (online preview on webpage) and got stuck when I got to these two sentences in the prologue: "We are the same as every other human being for more than 99 ...
j o's user avatar
  • 1
1 vote
0 answers
87 views

The space of all human DNAs [closed]

This is both a math and biology question but I think it makes more sense for a biologist to answer it. My question is: what can be said, if anything, about the space of all possible human DNAs (for a ...
user3078439's user avatar
12 votes
2 answers
23k views

What was the biological mechanism that allowed Tarrare to eat so much?

Are there any conjectured mechanisms that cause Tarrare's extremely oversized stomach and abdominal cavity? Along with his superhuman appetite of course. Whether from a medical perspective or a ...
hisairnessag3's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
217 views

Can I train my non-dominant hand and make it dominant?

Are our dominant limbs decided on birth or is there some way in which I can train my non-dominant hand and make it as coordinated as my dominant?
Vaishakh Sreekanth Menon's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
44 views

Have there been new discoveries concerning the perception of taste for the last 10 years? [closed]

What are the last discoveries concerning the perception of taste for the last 10 years? We discovered the 5th flavour: umami. Also the 6th and 7th: oleogustus and starchy. Anything else? Maybe in ...
Julie's user avatar
  • 19
6 votes
1 answer
231 views

Are all genetic disorders inherited?

I know that genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis are often passed down through generations and are therefore classified as genetic disorders, but if a mutation occurs spontaneously, which for ...
anna101's user avatar
  • 63
1 vote
1 answer
72 views

Would our body adapt to changes that are not in our DNA?

If a person was to undergo a treatment or surgery at a very young age, that significantly reduced their final height, would the rest of their body adjust to the sudden change? If not; because our arms’...
Melvin's user avatar
  • 113
0 votes
2 answers
70 views

Does low gravity exposure to early stages of human fetus have potential to unloc unused genetic information from earlier stages of evolution?

The title seems quite self explanatory but let me elaborate. New mutations do take a very long time and many generations to occure in the genetic code. But our genetic code already holds all the ...
Miroslav Řešetka's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
1k views

Is the lac operon repressed in the presence of both glucose and lactose?

In the presence of both sugars (glucose and lactose) will there be repression of the lac operon completely? I know that more glucose means less cAMP --> less CAP --> less positive regulation, and ...
HOSA Asks's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
605 views

How can a child be blood type AB, if both of the parents are blood type A?

Basically, both of my parents are blood type A (both are confirmed and it's also certain both of them are my biological parents). I recently found out my blood type is AB. How is this possible? I ...
Juliet's user avatar
  • 51
-1 votes
1 answer
70 views

Will our biological bodies be changed after we’ve occupied and settled Mars? [closed]

I had this question in mind for very long time, and I could not find a clear answer on the Internet, so I was hoping that you might know the answer. If we will bring life to planet Mars and a few ...
Alex A's user avatar
  • 117
-1 votes
1 answer
87 views

Are modern gene-editing techniques capable of creating genetically-superior versions of humans? [closed]

Can we alter the DNA in, say, a small-framed, low muscle mass male to those of elite bodybuilders? Can we alter the DNA sequence that stops balding and hair loss? How about the genes responsible for ...
Frederick Benson's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
2k views

How do you write genotypic and phenotypic ratios?

If two homozygous recessive parents are crossed, I know that all of the offspring will be homozygous recessive as well. Would you write the genotypic ratio as 0:0:4 then and the phenotypic as 0:4? (...
Katherine Mccamman's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
115 views

Does the deletion of Chromosome 20 cause immunity against prion disease?

I was reading recently about prion disease and it caught my attention that a normal prion protein is coded n chromosome 20, therefore, in order for an infectious prion protein to attack, there must be ...
phenolicdeath's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
138 views

Why is the mechanism of inheritance for this disease autosomal dominant?

An unrelated couple has a daughter and a son with the same rare condition. Neither parent has any obvious signs of the condition, but the father's mother (paternal grandmother) and her brother have ...
weepyhollow's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
130 views

What is the chance a given gene will end up in a given gamete?

Let us say a germ cell had a desired allele. This germ cell was replicated during interphase so that it had two of the desired allele. It then underwent meiosis. My question then is, what is the ...
Rome's user avatar
  • 65
2 votes
1 answer
364 views

Is marriage with half-cousin's daughter more risky than marriage with others?

I want to know is marriage with half-cousin's girl more risky than marriage with a non-family girl? Also I like to know if her parent are cousins(but from mother side), does it add more risk to this ...
user3486308's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
59 views

Neuroscience - A neuron with two types of synapses (electrical and chemical) at the same time

I learn that the nerves from the Peripheral Nervous System can carry signals from and to other organs of the body. I'm wondering if A Single Nerve carries 1) Only chemical signals 2) Only physical ...
PandoraU.U.D's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
143 views

Why can a zygote develop into all different types of cell, whereas a differentiated cell cannot? [closed]

A cell formed by the fertilization between two gametes has all the DNA and can lead the development of a human person (or other animals in other species). But other cells in a human person has also ...
Pablo's user avatar
  • 2,911
1 vote
0 answers
47 views

Which gene regulatory network is the largest in human?

What is the maximum number of nodes involved in any gene regulatory network and which network is it, provided its from human?
girl101's user avatar
  • 2,215
0 votes
1 answer
66 views

What are some good biological tests you can do to yourself? [closed]

I would like to do things like study my own blood and DNA. What kind of things can one do at the present time that are fairly simple. Or require minimal equipment like a microscope? Are there some ...
zooby's user avatar
  • 879
1 vote
0 answers
32 views

Is it possible to get a XYY genotype by the first meiotic non-disjunction?

I have read that the cause of XYY-Syndrome is a non-disjuction in the secondary non-disjunction in the meiosis. I was woundering if it is possible to get the XYY-Syndrom by the first meiotic non-...
bonapartenent's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
141 views

When was it understood that a male haemophilia sufferer can't pass it on to his sons?

Haemophilia A and B are both X-chromosome mutations, so a sufferer necessarily inherits the disease from his mother. She won't have serious symptoms unless both of her X chromosomes have the mutation, ...
John Dallman's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
37 views

What metric(s) is a good proxy for relatedness?

In attempting to seed a simulation, where an individual foregoes resources that go r to same-type individuals and (1-r) to all members (including same-type individuals). What commonly used metrics ...
sterid's user avatar
  • 466
4 votes
3 answers
446 views

Knockout and knockdown of gene

Out of curiosity, I got this question whether knocking out (deletion) of a gene on one side and knocking down (RNAi) of the same gene on the other side will affect the cell in a similar manner or not. ...
Jyoti Sharma's user avatar
-4 votes
1 answer
196 views

Can 2 people give rise to billions? Adam and Eve 2.0 [closed]

With with the advancement of GMOs the idea of giving rise to humans from 2 people is possible making questions like this invalid? How many people are required to maintain genetic diversity? With ...
Muze's user avatar
  • 1
0 votes
1 answer
32 views

What are some features that do not make an individual better than others without this feature? [closed]

If a mutation occurs so that this allele gives a noticeable feature that is present in this individual but absent in every other individual and this feature is of no benefit or detriment to the ...
Phease's user avatar
  • 3
0 votes
2 answers
131 views

Twins reproducing with each other ( just hypothetical)

If 2 twins (look exactly the same and also the genes which control their morphology, behaviour etc. are same and present at the same locus) produce an offspring , will their offspring be exact copy of ...
Beyond Zero's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
112 views

How can I verify my true genetic relationship with my close relatives with simple physical traits?

Question I don't know if it is ethical to ask a question like that, but I would like to know every simple physical trait that I can observe on me, my parents and my siblings which are regulated by a ...
Untitpoi's user avatar
  • 354