Autosomal recessive disorders are expressed in what percentage of offspring from two heterozygous parents?

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When two heterozygous parents (each carrying one dominant and one recessive allele) have offspring, the inheritance pattern of an autosomal recessive disorder follows a classic Mendelian ratio. Each parent contributes one allele to their offspring.

For two heterozygous parents, the possible combinations of alleles in their offspring can be represented as follows:

  • AA (homozygous dominant)

  • Aa (heterozygous)

  • Aa (heterozygous)

  • aa (homozygous recessive)

This results in a genotypic ratio of 1 AA : 2 Aa : 1 aa. Out of these combinations, it is the aa genotype that represents the autosomal recessive disorder. Therefore, the proportion of offspring that will express the autosomal recessive condition is 1 out of 4, or 25%.

This means that in a scenario involving two heterozygous carriers, the expected percentage of offspring expressing the disorder due to inheriting the recessive alleles from both parents is indeed 25%.

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