Answer:
Meiosis I in the mother, meiosis I in the father, and meiosis II in the father are all potential stages where nondisjunction may occur.
Explanation:
When a haploid sperm fertilizes a haploid egg that experiences nondisjunction, there is a chance that the resulting offspring's genotype could be Aaa.
Additionally, if an egg undergoing nondisjunction in meiosis II is fertilized by a haploid sperm, the genotype of the offspring could be AAA.
This is due to the fact that during meiosis I, homologous chromosomes are supposed to separate. If nondisjunction happens in this stage, both homologous chromosomes end up in the same daughter cell rather than segregating into different ones.
In the case of the mother, both X chromosomes would end up in one cell, leaving the other cell without any X chromosome.
If this occurs in the father, both the X and Y chromosomes could also be present in one cell, resulting in the absence of a sex chromosome in the other. Such scenarios imply that a parent might fail to pass on a sex chromosome to their child, leading to Turner syndrome, resulting in an XO configuration.
During meiosis II, sister chromatids ordinarily separate. A nondisjunction event in this phase means that the sister chromatids would migrate to the same daughter cell instead of separating into two.
When this happens in the mother, one cell would contain two identical copies of an X chromosome, while the other would lack an X chromosome. In the father, it could happen that neither of the two identical copies of the X chromosome is present in one cell, or alternatively, both identical Y chromosomes could be found together in one cell, leaving no sex chromosomes in the other. Such instances could result in a parent not transferring a sex chromosome to their child and again, this could lead to Turner syndrome with an XO genotype.