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Suppose you examined a pedigree of a large family, going back 6 generations. In generation 5, a woman ("G5W") has a serious genetic disease--its first incidence in the family. In the next generation, three of her offspring--two boys and one girl--are affected, with one daughter unaffected. What is the most likely explanation?

(A) G5W's parent--the one who married into the family--carried the disease allele (but wasn't affected), and it is autosomal dominant.
(B) A mutation in one of the G5W's parents, during gamete formation, created an X-linked dominant disease allele.
(C) A mutation in G5W created an autosomal dominant disease allele.
(D) The disease allele is recessive and X-linked; G5W's spouse also has the allele.

User Neha Tawar
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Answer:A mutation in one of the G5W's parents, during gamete formation, created an X-linked dominant disease allele.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Jamara
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