Obligate carrier
An obligate carrier is an individual who must carry a particular gene variant based on analysis of family history but who is clinically unaffected. The term usually applies to disorders inherited in an autosomal recessive and X-linked recessive manner.
X-linked Recessive
Inheritance
In X-linked recessive disorders, only females can be unaffected carriers of the recessive mutation, making such females obligate carriers of this type of disorder. Females acquire one X-chromosome from their father and one from their mother, and this means they can either be heterozygous for the mutated allele or homozygous. If heterozygous, she is simply a carrier of the mutated allele because the disease is recessive. If homozygous, she has the disease. An affected father with an X-linked recessive trait will always pass the trait on to a daughter. Therefore, all daughters of an affected male are obligate carriers. On the other hand, a carrier mother has a 50% chance of passing her mutated X-chromosome to a daughter. This makes all daughters of carrier mothers possible carriers but not obligate carriers. Males cannot be obligate or possible carriers of X-linked recessive traits because they only have one X-chromosome, and so are always phenotypically affected when receiving the mutated X-chromosome from their mother.Females that are heterozygous for X-linked recessive disorders are obligate carriers, but can never be phenotypically affected, because of X-inactivation. Heterozygous females have an X-chromosome from each parent; one with a mutated gene and one with a functional copy of the same gene. When the mutated chromosome is randomly inactivated in order to maintain the copy number, presence of the functional copy results in a normal phenotype. Males only have one copy of any gene on the X-chromosome, and because they do not undergo X-inactivation, they only have the mutated gene. As a result, these types of diseases most commonly phenotypically affect males and rarely females.