Topic 15: Chromosomal Changes Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four types of chromosomal rearrangements

A
  1. Duplication
  2. Deletion
  3. Inversion
  4. Translation
    Slide 5*
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2
Q

Duplication and deletion are… Inversion and translation are…

A

Addition or loss of genetic material
Movement of genetic material within the genome

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3
Q

How do chromosomal rearrangements occur? (3)

A
  1. Unequal crossing over (duplication and deletion)
  2. Double strand break repair (deletions, inversions, translocation)
  3. Transposable elements causing rearrangement
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4
Q

What is unequal crossing over

A

Mis-alignment during prophase 1 plus crossing over in the mis aligned region
Usually due to repetitive regions

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5
Q

Example of unequal crossing over

A

Red-green colourblindness: genes for red and green opsin are very similar and can mis align easily during prophase 1

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6
Q

Example of double stranded break repair causing rearrangement

A

Robertsonian translocation
Tiny chromosome fragmet is often lost

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7
Q

What is tandem duplication

A

Duplicated segments are adjacent

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8
Q

What are displaced duplications

A

Duplicated segments are located distantly on the same chr or diff chr (intra or inter chromosomal)

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9
Q

Types of duplications

A
  1. Tandem duplication
  2. Displaced duplication
  3. Reverse duplication
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10
Q

What is reverse duplication

A

Duplicated segments are inverted relative to each other
e.g. E F F E

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11
Q

What are the effects of duplication

A
  1. Problems with homologous pairing during meiosis
    -> Causes duplicated region to loop out during pairing
  2. Problems with gene dosage (alter phenotypic results)
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12
Q

How does gene duplication play a role in evolution

A

Many genes have essential roles in metabolism, development, physiology, etc
Gene needs to do its function, if there are duplicates one can be mutated while other is functioning. Mutant can become a new kind of gene

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13
Q

Effects of deletions

A

Phenotypic effects depend on what genes were located on deleted DNA
Many deletions = recessive lethal alleles

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14
Q

Individuals that are heterozygous for a deletion have three possible results:

A
  1. Gene dosage imbalance (essentially hemizygous)
  2. Recessive alleles on the WT homolog will be expressed (pseudodominance)
  3. Haploinsufficiency (one remaining copy is not enough)
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15
Q

E.g. of haploinsufficiency in deletion

A

Notch gene in fruit flies

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16
Q

Types of inversions

A
  1. Paracentric inversions = next to the centromere, centromere does not move
  2. Pericentric inversions = around the centromere, centromere moves
    Slide 16
17
Q

Types of translocations

A

Nonreciprocal translocation: one-way movement of genetic material from one chr to diff nonhomologous chr

Reciprocal translocation: two-way swap of genetic material btw nonhomologous chr

18
Q

Diff btw translocation and crossing over

A

Translocation = movement of genetical material btw nonhomologous chr
Crossing over = homologous chr

19
Q

Effects of inversion and translocation

A

Do not result in gain or loss of genetic material, but:
1. Can break genes into pieces = usually non functional or altered expression
2. Position dependent regulation is altered

20
Q

What is the position effect

A

When the location of a gene on a chr contributes to gene expression
e.g. euchromatin vs heterochromatin

21
Q

Example of the position effect

A

White locus in flies
W= red eyes, W- = white eyes
Inversion mutation leads to movement from euchromatin to heterochromatin = downregulation = red and white spotted eye

22
Q

Animations for meiotic complications

A

Are on eclass