How Can a Man be Both Uncle and Father to his Child?

By Dr. Barry Starr, Stanford at The Tech Program Director

The Tech
3 min readNov 4, 2015

Paternity tests are powerful but not perfect. They can sometimes give results that make a man look like he isn’t the father of the child even when he is.

For the past six months I have been working with a Washington couple trying to solve this question. They had used a fertility clinic and found through DNA testing that the child was unrelated to the dad. Since I write a column called, “Ask a Geneticist”, they wrote me to get some clarification on the test results.

Normally this would be chalked up to a mix up at the clinic but that didn’t really seem possible in this case. This is why I had the man take a second, more powerful test from 23andMe. The results showed that he was probably the child’s uncle.

This didn’t really make sense either. Which led to the idea that he might be a chimera.

Chimeras start out as fraternal twins. One egg is fertilized by one sperm and a second egg is fertilized by a second sperm.

But instead of growing separately into twins, the two embryos fuse together to form a chimera — a single person with two sets of DNA. Some of his cells have DNA from one twin and the rest have DNA from the other twin.

This would explain why he looked like an uncle in the test — his twin brother provided the DNA for his child. Great idea but we needed more than his DNA looking like the child’s uncle.

This is where genetic counselor Kayla Sheets of Vibrant Gene Consultingand Dr. Michael Baird of DNA Diagnostics Center come in. Together we can now show that the father was indeed a chimera. All we had to do was look at the DNA in his sperm cells.

Two Sets of DNA, One Man

While companies like 23andMe and AncestryDNA offer powerful relationship testing as part of their services, they only look at the DNA in your spit. This is why we turned to the DNA Diagnostic Center to look at the DNA in this man’s sperm.

When we took a close look, we could see two sets of DNA there. Around 90% of the sperm cells had DNA that matched the DNA in his cheek cells. We’ll call this Twin 1.

The other 10% of his sperm had DNA that was clearly related to the first but different. This was Twin 2’s DNA.

NBC Bay Area’s Scott Budman interviews Dr. Barry Starr about the fascinating study. Watch the story here: http://bit.ly/chimeraDad

Comparing the child’s DNA to Twin 2’s DNA showed a father/child relationship. So mom’s egg was fertilized by a sperm that had the DNA of Twin 2. In the end, the man was both father and uncle to the child!

To make things even more interesting, the couple also has another child who matches Twin 1. So one child was fathered by Twin 1 and the other by Twin 2. Except that Twins 1 and 2 are the same man. Is genetics cool or what?

He Is Not Alone

There are more chimeras roaming the streets than you might think. Continue Reading KQED’s website…

Have a question about the wild wide world of genetics? Submit a question to Ask A Geneticist through The Tech Museum of Innovation.

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