Basic Genetics & Mutational Mechanisms Flashcards

1
Q

Mendel’s First Law

A

The Law of Segregation: During meiosis, each allele of a single gene separates into different gametes

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2
Q

Mendel’s Second Law

A

The Law of Independent Assortment: At meiosis, the segregation of each pair of alleles is independent

Exception: genes linked on the same chromosome

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3
Q

Co-dominant traits

A

Both traits (alleles) are expressed in the heterozygous state

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4
Q

Semi-dominant or Incompletely Dominant

A

Heterozygous phenotype is intermediate between the two homozygous phenotypes

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5
Q

4 main categories of Mendelian Inheritance

A

Autosomal Dominant
Autosomal Recessive
Sex-Linked Dominant
Sex-Linked Recessive

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6
Q

Metabolic Disorders are frequently (pattern of inheritance)…

A

Autosomal Recessive; typically due to loss of function of an important enzyme

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7
Q

Penetrance

A

The fraction of individuals with a trait (genotype) who show manifestations of the disease

100% penetrance: all persons carrying a mutation demonstrate the trait

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8
Q

Expressivity

A

The degree to which a trait is expressed in an individual; a measure of severity

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9
Q

Pleiotropy

A

Multiple phenotypic effects (a syndrome) due to mutation in a single gene

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10
Q

Polymorphism

A

A locus for which at least two relatively common alleles exist within a population

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11
Q

Crossing over/meiotic recombination

A

Exchange of homologous segments of DNA between non-sister chromatids of a pair of homologous chromosomes; during Meiosis I

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12
Q

Acrocentric chromsomes

A

13, 14, 15, 21, 22; centromeres are located near the end of the chromosome; contain distinctive masses of chromatin (satellites) attached to their short arms by narrow stalks (secondary constrictions); stalks contain repetitive DNA sequences that code for rRNA

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13
Q

Metacentric chromosomes

A

The centromere is located in the middle of the chromosome

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14
Q

Submetacentric

A

The centromere is slightly removed from the center of the chromosome

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15
Q

Most common mechanism of imprinting

A

Allele-specific methylation of CpG dinucleotides in the promoter regions of imprinted genes, established and maintained in one of the two germ lines

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16
Q

Imprinting Centers

A

Non-coding DNA sequences that recruit DNA methyltransferase complexes that methylate CpG islands located near the IC on the same chromosome; this is where erasure & resetting of imprinting occurs

17
Q

Chromosomal Microarray (CMA)

A

Flourescently labeled sample DNA and control DNA are mixed and hybridized to an array; visualization of the array gives information about the spots/color intensities for each probe

Advantages: allows investigation of the whole genome simultaneously and frequently reveals duplications or deletions that cannot be seen by standard cyteogenic techniques

Limitations: detects gains and losses ONLY (cannot detect balanced rearrangements); cannot detect specific mutations or SNPs

18
Q

Heritability

A

The proportion of total variance in a trait that is due to variation in genes

19
Q

Haplotype

A

A combination of alleles at different loci on a chromosome that are often inherited together and contribute to a trait or disease status

20
Q

Ex. of incomplete penetrance

A

Type I Diabetes; 20% of the population carries one of two highest risk haplotypes, but incidence in the general population is only 0.4%

21
Q

Allelic Heterogeneity

A

Two kinds:

  1. Different alleles in the same gene resulting in the same trait
  2. Different alleles in the same gene resulting in different traits

Ex: Many mutations in the CFTR gene (alleles) lead to CF; different ‘classes’ of alleles lead to different presentation of disease

22
Q

Locus Heterogeneity

A

Variants in different genes result in similar clinical presentation

Ex: Early onset Alzheimer’s results from mutations in three separate genes on three different chromosome, which are all involved in the same physiological pathway

23
Q

Phenocopy

A

An environmentally caused phenotype that mimics the genetic version of the trait

Ex: Thalidomide-induced limb malformation vs. genetically induced

24
Q

Characteristics of Complex Traits

A

Incomplete Penetrance
Variable Expressivity
Heterogeneity - allele & locus
Presence of phenocopies

25
Q

Lambda S (relative risk)

A

Risk of disease in siblings of affected / risk of disease in general population

26
Q

Odds Ratio (OR)

A

Risk of disease given a particular gene variant / Risk of disease not given a particular gene variant

27
Q

Compound heterozygote

A

An individual who carries two different mutant alleles of the same gene

Ex: HbS/HbC

28
Q

4 mutational mechanisms

A

Loss of function of the protein
Gain of function of the protein
Acquisition of a novel property by the protein
Perturbed expression of a gene at the wrong time (heterochronic expression) or in the wrong place (ectopic expression)

29
Q

Replicative Segregation

A

During cell division, the multiple copies of mtDNA in each of the mitochondria in a cell replicate and sort randomly among the newly synthesized mitochondria, which are distributed randomly between the two daughter cells

30
Q

Homoplasmy & Heteroplasmy

A

Refers to the proportion of mutant and wild-type mitochondrial DNA passed on to a daughter cell during replicative segregation; a daughter cell that receives a pure population of wild type mtDNA is homoplasmic, whereas a daughter cell that receives a mixture of wild type and mutant mtDNA is heteroplasmic

31
Q

Loss of Function Mutations - 5 Examples

A

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy - DMD gene, dystrophin
alpha thalassemia - alpha thalassemia gene, a-globin
Turner syndrome - loss of X chromosome
HNPP - PMP-22 gene, peripheral myelin protein
OI Type I - COL1A1 gene, COL1A1 type collagen

32
Q

Gain of Function Mutations - 4 Examples

A

Hb Kempsey - B-globin gene, missense
Achondroplasia - FGFR3 gene, fibroblast growth factor receptor
Alzheimer Disease in Trisomy 21 - APP gene, amyloid precursor protein
Charcot-Marie-Tooth - PMP22 gene, peripheral myelin protein

33
Q

Novel Property mutations - Examples

A

Sickle Cell Disease - b-globin gene/protein, missense

Huntington disease: CAG repeats/polyglutamine tracts lead to novel toxicity of protein