Quote from: Nathan90 on March 26, 2012, 09:28:57 AM
Granted, I don't know all that much about genes and on top of that I have the problem that English isn't my native language.
But.. as far as I know. You can't have 'more DNA' from either, because it's 50/50. Unless you meant that your father gave you more dominant genes? In that case, I understand what you're saying but I wouldn't know. I've never had it tested.
My house-mate has a degree in neurobiology, and he and I get into convos about it all the time and yes, you're basically correct. Every-one gets the same amount of DNA from both genetic parents, but the misconception of "more from one parent" is actually about where one gets the most dominant genes.
As for the "theory" in the original post, I'd wager that parental genetic dominance has nothing to do with it. While I clearly have more of my father's genetic make-up dominant, my half-sister on my father's side also clearly has paternal genetic dominance, as does my half-sister on our mother's side (my full genetic sister, interestingly, clearly has maternal genetic dominance --assuming, of course, she
is my full sister, and knowing my mother, it's possible she's not). As for the other trans people I know, and among them who they claim to most-resemble (only one of whom I've been able to verify with a photo of her parents), it cuts about fifty-fifty for both trans men and women, as to who has maternal or paternal genetic dominance --which is really how it works for the rest of the world. Scientifically speaking, it's not a theory because not only is it untested, there's not really any grounds for it to even count as a solid hypothesis.