Chapter 6 Flashcards

1
Q

What is chromosome morphology based on the centromere location? (chromosomes are classified into four types- what are they?)

A
  1. Metacentric
  2. Submetacentric
  3. Acrocentric
  4. Telocentric
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2
Q

What is a Karyotype?

A

A complete set of chromosomes possessed by an organism.

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3
Q

How are karyotypes made?

A

Through cytogenetics, which uses a blood sample, separates the cells from serum by centrifuge, removing the white cells, culturing, stimulating the cells to divide, disable mitotic spindle, add hypotonic solution to swell cells, squash cells on a slide, fix, and stain, and then examine the chromosomes.

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4
Q

What do karyotypes tell us?

A

Karyotyping is a test to examine chromosomes. It can help identify abnormalities and rearrangements.

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5
Q

How do you determine if a karyotype is abnormal?

A

A karyotype is abnormal if you don’t have the right amount of chromosomes (either too many or too few). To determine if a karyotype is abnormal, check to see if it has the normal full set of 46 chromosomes.

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6
Q

What are the four types of chromosome mutations/rearrangements?

A
  1. Duplication
  2. Deletion- (pseudodominance and haploinsufficient)
  3. Inversion- (pericentric and paracentric)
  4. Translocation- (reciprocal and robertsonian)
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7
Q

What is duplication?

A

A segment of the chromosome is duplicated. Can cause problems in pairing of homologous chromosomes in meiosis, gene dosage- extra genes, possibly extra gene products, allow genes to mutate for evolution. Types of staining are G bands and Q bands

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8
Q

What is deletion (two types)?

A

A segment of the chromosome is deleted.

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9
Q

What are psuedodominance and haploinsufficient in a deletion?

A

Pseudodominance can uncover a recessive mutation (recessive allele expressed and it looks dominant).
Haploinsufficient means one copy isn’t enough to provide the phenotype that we would expect; it’s insufficient to give the phenotype we’re looking at.

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10
Q

What is an inversion (two types)?

A

A segment of the chromosome is turned 180 degrees. Alter gene expression based on location in chromosome. (pericentric and paracentric)

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11
Q

What are pericentric and paracentric inversions?

A

Pericentric inversions occur right next to the centromere. Paracentric inversions occur further away from centromere, no change directly next to centromere.

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12
Q

What is translocation (two types)?

A

A segment of a chromosome moves from one chromosome to a nonhomologous chromosome or to another place on the same chromosome. (Reciprocal and Robertsonian)

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13
Q

What is Reciprocal and Robertsonian translocation?

A

Reciprocal- two different chromosomes have exchanged segments with each other.
Robertsonian- An entire chromosome attaches to another centromere.

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14
Q

Where do mutations happen? (Two types of alterations)

A

Somatic alterations- something happens to one of your somatic cells (non-sex cells)
Germ-line alterations- something happens to germ cells and/or gametes.

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15
Q

What is the difference between germ-line and somatic alterations?

A

Somatic means changing genes in some of the cells of an existing person in a way that does not impact their reproductive cells, and germ-line means changing the genes in someone’s offspring and, ultimately and in a small way, the human species

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16
Q

What are the outcomes of chromosome mutation? Both for gene dosage and evolution.

A

Duplications:
gene dosage- extra genes, possibly extra gene product.
evolution- allows genes to mutate.
Deletion:
gene dosage- not enough genes, resulting in too little gene product.
evolution- allows genes to mutate.
*Duplication, deletion, inversion, and translocation have all played a huge role in evolution, allowing for alterations in genetic change. Mutations that allow organisms to change and outcompete- which has to do with how chromosomes are arranged.

17
Q

What is polyploidy?

A

The presence of more than two sets of chromosomes.

18
Q

What is aneuploidy?

A

An increase or decrease in the number of individual chromosomes.

19
Q

What causes aneuploidy? (3 things)

A
  1. Deletion of centromere. during mitosis or meiosis.
  2. Robertsonian translocation
  3. Nondisjunction during meiosis or mitosis.
20
Q

What causes polyploidy?

A

Total nondisjunction of chromosomes during mitosis or meiosis.

21
Q

What are the four types of aneuploidy?

A

Nullisomy: 2n-2 (loss of both members of homologous pair)
Monosomy: 2n-1 (loss of a single chromosome)
Trisomy: 2n+1 (gain of a single chromosome)
Tetrasomy: 2n+2 (gain of 2 homologous chromosomes, so 4 of 1 type)

22
Q

What are the effects of aneuploidy in plants?

A

Mutants could be trisomics (having a single extra chromosome)

23
Q

What are the effects of aneuploidy in humans and what are some examples? (two types of aneuploids)

A

Sex chromosome aneuploidy
- Turners syndrome (XO) and Klinefelter syndrome (XXY).

Autosomal aneuploidy
- Trisomy 21: Down syndrome, Primary down syndrome (random nondisjunction in egg formation- 95% of cases), familial down syndrome (Robertsonian translocation between chromosomes 14 and 21), Edward syndrome (trisomy 18), Patau syndrome (trisomy 13), Trisomy 8.

24
Q

What is autopolyploidy?

A

Developing extra sets of chromosomes from a single species.

25
Q

What is allopolyploidy?

A

Developing extra sets of chromosomes from two species.

26
Q

What will polyploidy cause?

A

-Increase in cell size
-Larger plant attributes
-Evolution: may give rise to new species