Asked by jayden
Sickle-cell disease is caused by a mutation that produces an abnormal protein. The gene for sickle-cell disease causes a person's red blood cells to be shaped like a sickle instead of being round and flat. Sickle-shaped red blood cells do not carry oxygen very well, which causes health problems and lowers survival rate. However, in areas where malaria is common, people that have the sickle-cell gene are protected from malaria. The malaria parasite relies on normal red blood cells to grow, and cannot easily complete its life cycle in sickle-shaped cells.
What does the given information demonstrate?
A.
All mutations in humans result in a neutral effect.
B.
A mutation's negative effects always outweigh its benefits.
C.
A mutation can be both harmful and beneficial.
D.
All mutations always have both good and bad effects.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
C. A mutation can be both harmful and beneficial.
Explanation: The sickle-cell mutation causes disease (harmful effect) but provides protection against malaria (beneficial effect). This contradicts A and B, and D is too absolute (not all mutations have both effects).
Explanation: The sickle-cell mutation causes disease (harmful effect) but provides protection against malaria (beneficial effect). This contradicts A and B, and D is too absolute (not all mutations have both effects).
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