Sign In

12.17 : Sex Linked Disorders

Like autosomes, sex chromosomes contain a variety of genes necessary for normal body function. When a mutation in one of these genes results in biological deficits, the disorder is considered sex-linked.

Y chromosome mutations are called “Y-linked” and only affect males since they alone carry a copy of that chromosome. Mutations to the relatively small Y chromosome can impact male sexual function and secondary sex characteristics. Y-chromosome infertility is a disorder that affects sperm production, caused by deletions to the azoospermia factor (AZF) regions of the Y chromosome. In general, Y-linked disorders are only passed from father to son; however, because affected males typically do not father children without assisted reproductive technologies, Y-chromosome infertility is not typically passed on to offspring.

X-linked disorders can be either dominant or recessive. X-linked dominant disorders are the result of a mutation to the X chromosome that can affect either males or females. However, some disorders, including Fragile X syndrome, affect males more severely than females, likely because males do not have a second, normal copy of the X chromosome. Fragile X syndrome is characterized by a wide range of developmental problems, including learning disabilities. X-linked hypophosphatemia is another X-linked dominant condition that manifests in a vitamin-D-resistant form of Rickets.

For a recessive mutation to cause biological deficits, both copies of a chromosome must be mutated. As a result, females must receive two mutated X chromosomes to display an X-linked disorder. In contrast, males are affected if their single X chromosome carries the mutation. As a result, males are affected more often by X-linked recessive conditions, including color blindness, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and hemophilia.

Tags
SexLinkedDisorders

From Chapter 12:

article

Now Playing

12.17 : Sex Linked Disorders

Mendelian Genetics

91.2K Views

article

12.1 : Punnett Squares

Mendelian Genetics

10.7K Views

article

12.2 : Monohybrid Crosses

Mendelian Genetics

6.8K Views

article

12.3 : Dihybrid Crosses

Mendelian Genetics

4.6K Views

article

12.4 : Trihybrid Crosses

Mendelian Genetics

21.3K Views

article

12.5 : Law of Independent Assortment

Mendelian Genetics

4.7K Views

article

12.6 : Chi-square Analysis

Mendelian Genetics

31.0K Views

article

12.7 : Pedigree Analysis

Mendelian Genetics

10.0K Views

article

12.8 : Multiple Allele Traits

Mendelian Genetics

7.2K Views

article

12.9 : Incomplete Dominance

Mendelian Genetics

15.7K Views

article

12.10 : Lethal Alleles

Mendelian Genetics

10.5K Views

article

12.11 : Polygenic Traits

Mendelian Genetics

3.5K Views

article

12.12 : Background and Environment Affect Phenotype

Mendelian Genetics

6.2K Views

article

12.13 : X and Y Chromosomes

Mendelian Genetics

15.2K Views

article

12.14 : The Y Chromosome Determines Maleness

Mendelian Genetics

6.0K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved