First Aid, Chapter 1 Immune mechanisms: Immunogenetics Flashcards

1
Q

Name the DNA bases (nucleotides). What are the categories. Which pair together.

A

Adenine (A), guanine (G), thymine (T), and cytosine (C). A and G are purines. T and C are pyrimidines. A forms a base pair with T and G forms a base pair with C.

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2
Q

What nucleotides are in RNA?

A

A, G, Uracil (instead of T), and C.

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3
Q

What is the step-wise process of making protein from DNA and RNA. What is each step called?

A

 mRNA is copied from DNA and travels to ribosome.  tRNA transports amino acids to ribosome.  rRNA and protein combine to make ribosomes.
Transcription is the synthesis of mRNA from DNA. Translation is the synthesis of proteins from mRNA.

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4
Q

What types of mutations are passed down to generations? What mutations do not get passed down?

A

 Germ-line mutations can be passed down via reproductive cells.  Somatic mutations involve cells outside the reproductive system and generally do not get passed to subsequent generations.

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5
Q

What do the following mutations mean? frameshift, missesne, nonsense, silent, and neutral?

A

Frameshift- Insertion or deletion causes a shift in the translational reading frame. More dramatic effect on peptide sequence.

Missense Single-nucleotide substitution causes the translation of a different amino acid.

Nonsense Single-nucleotide substitution causes an early stop (or termination) codon.

Silent Single-nucleotide substitution does not cause a change in amino acid sequence

Neutral Single-nucleotide substitution causes a different but similar amino acid to be translated

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6
Q

What is an SNP?

A

 A single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) is a variation in DNA sequence that occurs when a single nucleotide in a gene of an individual is different from that of other individuals.  SNPs are not mutations. SNPs usually occur more frequently in noncoding DNA sequences. Overall, these occur at a higher frequency than mutations

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7
Q

Why are SNPs useful for tracking human genetic variations?

A

SNPs occur in varying frequency between different geographic and ethnic groups. Therefore, they are useful markers of human genetic variations, which sometimes underlie different susceptibilities to diseases

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8
Q

What kind of studies are SNPs used in?

A

genome-wide association studies (GWAS) as highresolution gene-mapping markers related to various diseases

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9
Q

What is the protein encoded by the filaggrin gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - Filaggrin
Function - Essential for epidermal barrier
Atopy relevance - Increased risk of eczema and asthma

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10
Q

What is the protein encoded by the 17q12-21 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - ORMDL3
Function - Unknown
Atopy relevance - Increased risk of asthma

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11
Q

What is the protein encoded by the 5q22-32 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - CD14
Function - Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) receptor
Atopy relevance - Both increased as well as reduced risk of asthma and atopy

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12
Q

What is the protein encoded by the 3p21-22 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - CCR5
Function - Chemokine receptor
Atopy relevance - Protection against nonatopic asthma

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13
Q

What is the protein encoded by the Xp22 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - TLR7 and 8
Function - Pattern recognition receptor for viral ssRNA
Atopy relevance -
Increased risk for asthma, rhinitis, atopic dermatitis, and increased specific IgE

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14
Q

What is the protein encoded by the 5q31 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - IL-13
Function - Cytokine that induces IgE secretion, mucus production, and collagen synthesis
Atopy relevance - Increased risk of asthma, bronchial hyper-responsiveness, and skin-test responsiveness. Linked to response to montelukast

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15
Q

What is the protein encoded by the ADRB2 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - B2 -adrenergic receptor
Function - adrenaline and nonadrenaline receptor
Atopy relevance - Arg/Arg phenotype with decreased albuterol response compared with Gly/Gly phenotype at residue 16

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16
Q

What is the protein encoded by the ADAM33 gene? What is the function? What is the relevance in atopy?

A

Protein - Type 1 transmembrane protein
Function - Involved in cell-to-cell interactions
Atopy relevance - Increased risk of asthma and bronchial hyperresponsiveness

17
Q

What is epigenetics?

A

changes in gene function that occur without a change in the sequence of DNA. These changes occur as a result of the interaction of the environment with the genome.

18
Q

What are 2 genetic mechanisms that cause epigenetic changes?

A

DNA methylation and histone modification.