Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Inheritance of Most X‐linked Traits is Not Dominant or Recessive, Just X‐linked

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A(2004)SCI 3区

Univ Chicago

Cited 149|Views9
Abstract
The existence of X‐linked disorders in humans has been recognized for many centuries, based on lessons in religious texts and observations of specific human families (e.g., color blindness or Daltonism). Our modern concepts of Mendelian (including X‐linked) inheritance originated just after the turn of the last century. Early concepts of dominance and recessiveness were first used in conjunction with autosomal traits, and then applied to “sex”‐linked traits to distinguish X‐linked recessive and X‐linked dominant inheritance. The former was defined as vertical transmission in which carrier women pass the disorder to affected sons, while the latter was defined as vertical transmission in which daughters of affected males are always affected, transmitting the disorder to offspring of both sexes. However, many X‐linked disorders such as adrenoleukodystrophy, fragile X syndrome, and ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency do not fit these rules. We reviewed the literature on 32 X‐linked disorders and recorded information on penetrance and expressivity in both sexes. As expected, penetrance and an index of severity of the phenotype (defined in our Methods) were both high in males, while the severity index was low in females. Contrary to standard presentations of X‐linked inheritance, penetrance was highly variable in females. Our analysis classified penetrance as high in 28% of the disorders studied, intermediate in 31%, and low in 40%. The high proportion of X‐linked disorders with intermediate penetrance is difficult to reconcile with standard definitions of X‐linked recessive and dominant inheritance. They do not capture the extraordinarily variable expressivity of X‐linked disorders or take into account the multiple mechanisms that can result in disease expression in females, which include cell autonomous expression, skewed X‐inactivation, clonal expansion, and somatic mosaicism. We recommend that use of the terms X‐linked recessive and dominant be discontinued, and that all such disorders be simply described as following “X‐linked” inheritance. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
More
Translated text
Key words
dominant,recessive,X chromosome,X-inactivation,X-linked inheritance
求助PDF
上传PDF
Bibtex
AI Read Science
AI Summary
AI Summary is the key point extracted automatically understanding the full text of the paper, including the background, methods, results, conclusions, icons and other key content, so that you can get the outline of the paper at a glance.
Example
Background
Key content
Introduction
Methods
Results
Related work
Fund
Key content
  • Pretraining has recently greatly promoted the development of natural language processing (NLP)
  • We show that M6 outperforms the baselines in multimodal downstream tasks, and the large M6 with 10 parameters can reach a better performance
  • We propose a method called M6 that is able to process information of multiple modalities and perform both single-modal and cross-modal understanding and generation
  • The model is scaled to large model with 10 billion parameters with sophisticated deployment, and the 10 -parameter M6-large is the largest pretrained model in Chinese
  • Experimental results show that our proposed M6 outperforms the baseline in a number of downstream tasks concerning both single modality and multiple modalities We will continue the pretraining of extremely large models by increasing data to explore the limit of its performance
Upload PDF to Generate Summary
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Related Papers

Fabry disease.

Pharmacology & therapeutics 2009

被引用186

Does Inbreeding Distort Sex-Ratios?

Richard Frankham, Jonathan Wilcken
Conservation Genetics 2006

被引用21

X-Chromosome Inactivation and Skin Disease

Journal of Investigative Dermatology 2008

被引用57

KIAA2022 Nonsense Mutation in a Symptomatic Female

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A 2015

被引用23

Data Disclaimer
The page data are from open Internet sources, cooperative publishers and automatic analysis results through AI technology. We do not make any commitments and guarantees for the validity, accuracy, correctness, reliability, completeness and timeliness of the page data. If you have any questions, please contact us by email: report@aminer.cn
Chat Paper
GPU is busy, summary generation fails
Rerequest