. The Y chromosome of the father cannot oppose this. The healthy allele on the X chromosome of the father can compensate for this in a daughter. She can see normally, but she becomes a conductor. The same pattern of inheritance applies to
Haemophilia.
Gonosomal recessive genes are also passed on by carriers. The term is used in
human genetics in cases of hereditary traits in which the observed trait lies on the female
sex chromosome, the
X chromosome. These are
sex-linked genes. The carriers are always
women. Women have two homologous sex chromosomes (XX).
Men cannot be carriers because they only have one X chromosome. If a man has a certain recessive genetic disposition on his X chromosome, this is called
hemizygous and it gets phenotypically expressed. Although the Y chromosome is not a really homologous chromosome and carries relatively little genetic information compared to X chromosomes, a genetic component on the Y chromosome can come to expression because there is no homologous chromosome with an allele which could overlay it. Examples of traits inherited via the X chromosome are
color blindness and the most common hereditary form of
haemophilia which therefore affect men much more often than women.
Queen Victoria, and her daughters Princesses Alice and Beatrix, were carriers of the
hemophilia gene (an abnormal allele of a gene, necessary to produce one of the blood clotting factors). Both had children who continued to pass on the gene to succeeding generations of the royal houses of
Spain and
Russia, into which they married. Since males only have one X chromosome, males who carried the altered gene had hemophilia B. Those female children who inherited the altered gene were asymptomatic carriers who also would have passed it to half of their children. Gonosomal dominant inheritances are also known. There are
no carriers since owners of a dominant hereditary disposition phenotypically express the trait in each case. ==References==