Sep. 21st, 2005

stariel: (stari)
Harry Potter and the recessive allele

SIR — We are bombarded with news of genetic discoveries on an almost daily basis, but people without a formal knowledge of heredity and genetics can have difficulty in deciphering and applying this information. Education and debate across all ages would undoubtedly help, but how can we teach children these concepts?

We believe that successful lessons for younger children can be achieved using analogies of direct interest and relevance. Most children are familiar with J. K. Rowling’s stories about the young wizard Harry Potter (whose latest exploit, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, was published by Bloomsbury in July). They are set in a world like our own, but populated by a minority of people with supernatural powers (wizards and witches) and a majority of people without (muggles).

Wizards or witches can be of any race, and may be the offspring of a wizard and a witch, the offspring of two muggles (‘muggle-born’), or of mixed ancestry (‘half-blood’)

This suggests that wizarding ability is inherited in a mendelian fashion, with the wizard allele (W) being recessive to the muggle allele (M). According to this hypothesis, all wizards and witches therefore have two copies of the wizard allele (WW). Harry’s friends Ron Weasley and Neville Longbottom and his arch-enemy Draco Malfoy are ‘pure-blood’ wizards: WW with WW ancestors for generations back. Harry’s friend Hermione is a powerful muggle-born witch (WW with WM parents). Their classmate Seamus is a half-blood wizard, the son of a witch and a muggle (WW with one WW and one WM parent). Harry (WW with WW parents) is not considered a pure-blood, as his mother was muggle-born.

There may even be examples of incomplete penetrance (Neville has poor wizarding skills) and possible mutations or questionable paternity: Filch, the caretaker, is a ‘squib’, someone born into a wizarding family but with no wizarding powers of their own.

We believe that, with the use of these examples, the concepts of mendelian genetics can be introduced to children as young as five, and then built on by gradually introducing specific terms such as ‘gene’ and ‘allele’, and relating these to chromosomes and DNA. At every stage, the children’s familiarity with the Harry Potter characters can be used as a hook to engage them in discussing concepts of heredity and genetics.


Jeffrey M. Craig*‡, Renee Dow†,
MaryAnne Aitken†‡
*Chromosome Research, Murdoch Childrens
Research Institute, Royal Childrens Hospital,
†Genetics Education, Murdoch Childrens
Research Institute, Royal Childrens Hospital,
‡Department of Paediatrics, University of
Melbourne, Royal Childrens Hospital,
Flemington Road, Parkville,
Victoria 3052, Australia


I have to say, overall a very good article. The science is solid, although it isn't quite traditional to use two letters for alleles of the same trait. It should be that M (muggle) is dominant and m (wizard) is recessive. Otherwise very cute - and an interesting idea!
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A sign about all the kinds of food you can't take into a store. This fabulous photo merging was done only with the aid of Microsoft Paint, so don't get on my case hey!
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Today when I got home there was a box from drugstore.com waiting for me. It contained a tea brewing basket, a few household essentials, and a toy for the kitties.

The toy is a snake with crackley stuff inside it, and as soon as I got it out they started fighting over it. A few minutes later it looked like this:

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