Concepts

Genetic Disorders

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

Diseases caused by abnormalities in an individual's genes or chromosomes, which may be inherited from parents or arise from new mutations.

Key points

  • Sickle cell anaemia and thalassaemia are inherited disorders of haemoglobin that cause abnormal or insufficient red blood cells; both are recessive and common in parts of India.
  • Haemophilia is an X-linked recessive disorder in which blood does not clot properly; it mostly affects males and is famously called the royal disease.
  • Colour blindness (red-green) is another X-linked recessive trait, far more common in men than women.
  • Down syndrome is a chromosomal disorder caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21 (trisomy 21), not by a single faulty gene.
  • Genetic disorders may be single-gene (sickle cell, haemophilia), chromosomal (Down syndrome), or multifactorial; carrier screening and genetic counselling help families assess risk.

Why it matters for CAPF

Sickle cell anaemia, thalassaemia, haemophilia and colour blindness as X-linked disorders, and Down syndrome as a chromosomal disorder are standard biology facts, and sickle cell control is a recognised national public-health programme.

Common confusion

Down syndrome is chromosomal (an extra chromosome 21), not a single-gene defect; haemophilia and colour blindness are X-linked and so are far more common in males. Sickle cell carriers (one copy) are usually healthy and may even resist malaria, while two copies cause the disease.

One-line recall

Genetic disorders include sickle cell anaemia and thalassaemia (haemoglobin), haemophilia and colour blindness (X-linked, mostly males), and Down syndrome (extra chromosome 21).

concept dna and rna, concept human blood groups, concept crispr

Parent note

biotechnology and genetics

← BackAll of Concepts