inheritance and dna structure tbl Flashcards

1
Q

know the symbols used in pedigree analysis look at ipad pic

A
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2
Q

whats the central dogma

A

dominant paradigm molecular biology dna - rna - polypeptide (proteins)

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3
Q

post translational changes to proteins even those that do not bind DNA can be heritable

A

epigenetics

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4
Q

by convention we describes polynucledotides in the ____ direction

A

5’ to 3’ direction
this is the direction of DNA and RNA synthesis

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5
Q

relaxed b dna

A

strands do not wrap around each other evenly, sugar phosphates “backbones” are far fapart 22 a grow closer 12 a

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6
Q

two categories that distinguish both compaction and accessibility of the chromatin DNA

A

heterochromatin and euchromatin

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7
Q

epigenetics
“marks” influence how the genome is interpreted

A

all changes that influence the phenotype without altering the genotype they consist of changes in the properties of a cell that do not represent a change in genetic information at the level of DNA sequence.

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8
Q

which of the following often results in the presence of uracil in dna

A

deamination of cytosine

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9
Q

the hardy weignberg equation is never met in humans ever

(p+q)2=p2+2pq+q2=1

A

its only true when theres large population with random mating that has genotype frequencies which remain constant from one generation to the next

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10
Q

why is hardy weinberg equation clinically relevant

A

allows us to estimate carrier frequencies and the disease incidence for autosomal recessive diseases this can be used for x linked disease

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11
Q

important concept is that carrier frequency is far more common than disease incidence and allele frequency

A
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12
Q

autosomal dominant 50% chance of passing allele from affected parent to child

A

examples huntington disease or marfan syndrome

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13
Q

autosomal recessive must inherit 2 copies of this allele 1 form each parent typically not in every generation

A

example
cystic fibrosis and sickle cell disease

2 carriers who are unaffected have 25% chance of passing this gene
they have 50% chance of child being carrier but unaffected and another 25% chance that they will no inherit the allele at all

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14
Q

x linked dominant women and men need only inherit one copy of the allele for it to be expressed

A

females may experience
less severe symptoms than males because of their other X chromosome. Fathers
cannot pass this on to their sons. exempli gratia Fragile X syndrome

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15
Q

MALES ONLY HAVE 1 X CHROMOSOME and thus if they
inherit a copy from their mother they will express the disease. FEMALES HAVE 2 X
Chromosomes and therefore almost never express these diseases.

A

x linked recessive
Fathers can pass this
gene onto their daughters but not their sons. exempli gratia hemophilia, and Fabry disease

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16
Q

X-Linked → these alleles are neither clearly dominant nor recessive. similar to the X-
linked recessive males need only one copy to express it.

A

example
Glucose-6-phosphate-
dehydrogenase deficiency, and X-Linked thrombocytopenia

17
Q
A
18
Q
A