08 Precision Medicine - Human Genome, Genetic Variation and Methods to Detect Variation Flashcards

1
Q

How many bp does the human genome have?

A

~3 billion bp

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2
Q

What do regulatory elements in a gene do?

A

control gene expression

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3
Q

Properties of a functional genome

A
  • organized
  • usable (i.e. regulated and expressed)
  • stable
  • copied accurately to the next generation of cells
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4
Q

What accounts for most phenotypes that are observed?

A

Genetic variation

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5
Q

Types of genetic variations

A
  • Copy number variation
  • Structural variation
  • Sequence level variation
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6
Q

Example of copy number variation

A

Down syndrome (trisomy 21)

  • characteristic facial features
  • physical growth delays
  • mild to moderate intellectual disability
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7
Q

Types of structural genetic variation

A
  • Deletion
  • Duplication
  • Inversion
  • Translocation
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8
Q

Example of structural genetic variation

A

Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy (FSHD)
- adolescent onset of progressive weakness of muscles in the face, shoulders and arms
- deletion of ~30-3000kb
- <11 copies of D4Z4 -> expressed to produce DUX4 (toxic to muscles)

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9
Q

Types of sequence level variation

A
  • Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)
  • Insertion/deletion (indel)
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10
Q

Example of SNP disease

A

Sickle cell disease

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11
Q

What are dideoxynucleotides?

A

Nucleotides that lack both the 2’ and 3’ OH group of ribose

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12
Q

How does Sanger sequencing work?

A
  • dNTPs are mixed with colored ddNTPs
  • Chain termination (no 3’ OH -> cannot form phospodiester bond)
  • Separation by size
  • 500-800 bp
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13
Q

Examples of next generation sequencing technology

A

Short reads
- Sequencing by synthesis (Solexa/Illumina)
- Nanoball sequencing (Complete Genomics/BGI)
- pH sensing (Ion Torrent/ThermoFisher)

Long reads
- Single molecule sequencing via dye labels (Pacific Bioscience)
- Single molecule sequencing via nanopore sensing (Oxford Nanopore)

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14
Q

Limitation of sequencing by synthesis

A

Sequencing reads are short

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15
Q

Why are adaptors and barcodes added to the DNA fragment library before sequencing?

A

Adaptors are critical for the attachment to the flow cell and allow for the annealing of primers for bridge amplification and the sequencing reaction. Barcodes allow the pooling of multiple sequencing samples in a single sequencing run.

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