Seminara S B, Dryja T P
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Hum Genet. 1994 Jun;93(6):629-34. doi: 10.1007/BF00201561.
The preferential transmission of the mutant allele to offspring from fathers who carry a germline mutation in the retinoblastoma gene was examined by analyzing 46 consecutive pedigrees. Among 75 offspring from 29 fathers, the ratio of carriers to noncarriers was 49%. Among the 106 offspring from 55 mothers the ratio was 57%. Neither ratio differs statistically from the expected 50%. When the analysis was limited to only those families with low-penetrance retinoblastoma, we still did not observe a biased transmission of alleles from fathers, although mothers did have an excess of carrier offspring of borderline statistical significance (the P-value was approximately 0.03). While we cannot rule out a biased transmission of alleles from some parents, there appears to be no such bias overall.