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It would be possible for a Klinefelter (XXY) cat to have tortoise shell color.

a) True
b) False

User Max Wen
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1 Answer

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Final answer:

A Klinefelter (XXY) cat cannot exhibit tortoiseshell color because tortoiseshell coloring is the result of two different X chromosomes with different coat color alleles undergoing random inactivation in females. Klinefelter syndrome results in a male phenotype with an extra X chromosome, but these males do not show the tortoiseshell pattern.

Step-by-step explanation:

The answer to the student's question is false, a Klinefelter (XXY) cat cannot have a tortoiseshell color. Tortoiseshell coat color in cats is a result of embryonic X inactivation, which is observed in mammalian females who have two different X chromosomes that carry different alleles for coat color.

Since male cats have only one X chromosome, under normal circumstances they do not exhibit a tortoiseshell coat. The XXY genotype corresponds to Klinefelter syndrome, which typically results in a male phenotype. While males with Klinefelter syndrome have an extra X chromosome, the presence of a Y chromosome results in a male phenotype, and they do not express the tortoiseshell pattern because it requires two X chromosomes with different coat color alleles to be randomly inactivated between different cells during development.

User Ravi Chhabra
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