You're looking for a line of women who only have daughters, and whose daughters always share this trait.
This is doable. What I think may be most reliable way to pull it off requires some hefty genetic engineering, but nothing beyond what current technology is capable of.
The trick is to use a gene drive.
Pick a spot between two base pairs in an unused location in one of your target's chromosomes (doesn't really matter which one; a body chromosome might give slightly better results than an X chromosome, for reasons I'll explain later), and fabricate a strand of DNA containing the following:
- A copy of the nucleotides on one side of the chosen location
- A nucleotide sequence encoding the Cas9 enzyme, which, when given a strand of RNA as a guide, will scan a cell's DNA for a section that matches the RNA guide, and cut the DNA right there
- A copy of the base pairs immediately around the chosen location on both sides, which will be transcribed into the guide RNA for the Cas9
- A gene that will cause the cell to self-destruct in the presence of a Y chromosome. Maybe a gene that is inactive by default, but is activated by the protein produced by the SRY gene (which is located on the Y chromosome and causes maleness), and triggers programmed cell death. Or something like that. It doesn't really matter, as long as the presence of this gene and a Y chromosome in the same cell causes the cell to die
- And, finally, a copy of the nucleotides on the other side of the chosen location
When this strand of DNA is inserted into a cell, the following happens:
- RNA Polymerase enzymes in the cell transcribe the DNA into RNA, and then ribosomes read the RNA and synthesize the Cas9 enzyme
- The Cas9 programs itself with the guide RNA, then diffuses its way into the nucleus of the cell
- The Cas9 sifts through the cell's DNA until it finds a section that matches the guide RNA- which will be the location chosen earlier
- The Cas9 cuts the DNA strand right there
- The cell's built-in DNA-repairing mechanisms see that one of the chromosomes has been cut, and looks around in nearby DNA for the same sequences as the cut ends of the chromosome (which would normally be the corresponding point on its paired counterpart)
- The DNA-repairing mechanisms find that the original DNA sequence you fabricated and inserted into the cell fits perfectly, and "repair" the chromosome by copying your DNA to fill the gap
In effect, you've created a strand of DNA that inserts itself into a predetermined location in a cell's genome, in both members of a chromosome pair. Permanently. Get this into a woman's ovaries (maybe by way of in vitro fertilization, maybe after she's grown up by way of an engineered retrovirus), and the curse is laid.
Whenever a woman carrying this "curse" conceives, the Cas9 will immediately go to work in cutting the appropriate chromosome from the sperm in the same, preselected place, and the zygote's DNA-repair machinery will go to work copying over the "curse" DNA from the egg to fill in the gap, by exactly the same means described above. Thus, a cursed woman's children are guaranteed to carry two copies of the "curse" gene. Then, if the sperm carried a Y chromosome, the self-destruction part of the "curse" will trigger, killing the embryo and causing a miscarriage long before the woman could realize she was pregnant. However, if the sperm did not have a Y chromosome, the self-destruct gene will not trigger, and the woman will bear a viable daughter.
I mentioned earlier that it's probably preferable if this "curse" gene inserts itself into a body chromosome, rather than the X chromosome. This is because, if the "curse" is in a body chromosome, all of a "cursed" woman's descendants are guaranteed to carry two copies of the "curse". If, by some fluke, she manages to have a son, the son's children will also inherit the "curse", regardless of their gender, so he too will only have daughters. If, on the other hand, the "curse" was aimed at the X chromosome, the improbable son would only have one copy of the "curse" (because he has only one X chromosome). He would be able to have sons and daughters like any healthy man (because his sons would not inherit his "cursed" X chromosome), and though his daughters would still carry the "curse", his sons would be free of it entirely.
Come to think of it, that could actually make for an interesting plot. Whatever. It's up to you. Have fun with it.
3yet I wonder why this is not better addressed to biology – L.Dutch - Reinstate Monica – 2018-06-06T05:26:55.310
7if it were males always having male offspring with other woman this would be easy, but for all female, it would have to be something such as L.Dutch suggested – Blade Wraith – 2018-06-06T06:28:53.170
Parthenogenesis is one option – SilverCookies – 2018-06-06T13:38:36.243
@BladeWraith Why would male offsprings be conceptually easier? What do you have in mind? I can’t think of a plausible mechanism: producing disproportionately more female children seems way easier, see TCAT’s answer. – Konrad Rudolph – 2018-06-06T14:55:27.953
1Well probability may give you a more simple explanation. Suppose you have 1/2 chance to have a female, then having N females and no male is 1/2^N, for 10 this leads to 1 over 1024. That means that in the mean, one family over roughly 1000 can have only 10 female children. Isn't it what we can observe ? – Jean-Baptiste Yunès – 2018-06-06T15:13:10.117
5@KonradRudolph I think Blade Wraith is looking at it from the angle that under normal circumstances the father is the one who determines the gender, so it would be easier to come up with a mechanism that affects the fathers in the family instead of the mothers. This would then restrict them to only having sons in order to keep it to just one gender. – Ben Sutton – 2018-06-06T15:29:58.430
@BenSutton I see. However, that’s not actually correct — it isn’t the father who determines the gender; it’s the individual gamete, which is a big difference. Of course having a mechanism which selects paternal gametes might be thinkable. But so is a mechanism that selects (fertilised) zygote in utero. One is not a priori more plausible than the other. – Konrad Rudolph – 2018-06-06T15:37:21.653
@KonradRudolph Right, that's what I meant - the gamete determining the gender comes from the father. I wasn't implying that the father sits there and thinks, "Hmm, I'd like to have a son." I was just trying to clarify that (from how I read it) Blade Wraith was saying it would be easier to think of a mechanism that affects the gender-determining parent. Not that one mechanism would be more plausible than the other, just that it would take more thinking to come up with one for the mother. – Ben Sutton – 2018-06-06T15:53:48.183
A case famous here is the King Henry VIII who famously had several wives trying to get a boy. and only sort of managed it once. – Wilf – 2018-06-06T16:36:41.800
There are, in fact, male lines that carry a mutation where very few female sperm are viable. I can't find refs among search clutter but a friend of mine from such a family has done some research. – arp – 2018-06-06T19:30:32.577
1@Jean-BaptisteYunès my mother's family was 10 girls, 0 boys, and 2 miscarriages (I don't know the sex of those). As a fan of statistics, I've wondered on many occasions if they were just the 1 in 1024, or if there was something that made the boys inviable. I doubt I'll ever know, since I'm not going to go quizzing my grandmother about the sex of the two she lost, nor do I have enough money to throw at genetic testing for known issues just to satisfy my curiosity. – childofsoong – 2018-06-06T19:55:45.793
7There is actually a condition for some females with their DNA that some how gives miscarriages when she is pregnant of a boy around 10 weeks, girls do not seem affected by this. I don't know what it is called, but it is actually a real thing because I knew a family where the mother (and her mother) had this issue. If you get to 16 weeks it is either a girl or you are extremely lucky. – Mixxiphoid – 2018-06-06T21:43:27.493
@KonradRudolph, Ben Sutton is correct in what i was meaning, as the X/Y chromosome come from the paternal DNA i meant it is feasibly easier to have a genetic condition where the X Gametes are either weaker or slower or [insert plot point here] then the Y gametes. Also Wilf thats not actually true, there are many documented sons of Henry VIII, there were just all illegitimate, he was found of other women and had a lot of kids in general, many of which were boys – Blade Wraith – 2018-06-07T07:14:14.817
@Mixxiphoid Fetal gender ratio in recurrent miscarriages Del Fabro et al. Int J Womens Health. 2011; 3: 213–217. is interesting here
– Chris H – 2018-06-07T15:07:01.910Another question you'll have to solve is: how would this family remain "a family" for long? If each daughter takes her husband's name at marriage, there's no family name that would survive across generations. For how many generations would anyone even remember that these girls were all descended from the same ancestor? 3 or 4? Do you know all your great-grandparents' names? – workerjoe – 2018-06-08T14:21:14.710
@Preg-Fan in the case of parthenogenesis, only females exists : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cnemidophorus
– user2284570 – 2018-06-09T12:43:26.497