L7&8- Molecular basis of inherited disease Flashcards

1
Q

Which direction is DNA synthesised?

A

DNA sequences are written in a 5´-3´ direction

This is the direction in which DNA and RNA are synthesized

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2
Q

Single-copy sequences

A

(non-repetitive)

Genes

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3
Q

Repetitive sequences

A

-Interspersed repeats
e.g. Alu repeats
-“Satellite” DNA
Large blocks of repetitive sequence
Heterochromatin

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4
Q

What are genes

A

Functional units of DNA
-Genes are expressed
Some place, some of the time

Transcription – copying into RNA
Translation – turning RNA into protein
-Not all
-Short and long non-coding RNAs inc. miRNAs

Components
Exons
Introns
Regulatory sequences
Promoters, enhancers, locus control regions
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5
Q

Look up gene structure

A

E.g promoter region
untranslated region
Introns
exons

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6
Q

Where does transcription, polyadenylation and splicing occur?

A

In the nucleus

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7
Q

Where does translation and post-translational modifications occur?

A

In the cytoplasm

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8
Q

What is alternative splicing

A

When splicing occurs it can skip an exon

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9
Q

What are processed genes?

A
Intronless copies of other genes
Usually remote from parent gene
Reverse transcription and reintegration
cf. retroviruses
Occasionally remain functional
e.g. PGK2 (testis-specific)
Most are non-functional
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10
Q

Repetitive DNA

A

-Satellite DNA
Large blocks of repetitive DNA sequence

-Interspersed repeats
Scattered around the genome

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11
Q

Satellite DNA

A

Large blocks at centromeres and heterochromatic chromosomal regions

-Simple tandemly repeated sequences
Many types e.g. alphoid DNA
Centromere repeat
Chromosome-specific

-Size of blocks may be polymorphic
1, 9, 16, Y

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12
Q

Alphoid DNA

A

A type of satellite DNA found at centromeres

Repeat unit sequence shows chromosome-specific sequence variation (different for each chromosome so you can identify each chromosome)

Alphoid DNA is required for assembly of the centromere

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13
Q

Interspersed repeats

A

-Scattered around the genome

-Individual copies are present at many locations
Maybe between or within genes
Example: Alu repeat

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14
Q

Types of mutation

A

-Large deletions or insertions
Effects may be variable
May be missed by PCR-based screening methods if heterozygous
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (deletions)
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (duplication)

-Gross rearrangements
Haemophilia A

  • Point mutations
  • Trinucleotide repeat expansions
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15
Q

Haemaphilia A

A

Inverted segment in q arm

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16
Q

What kind of mutation can a point mutation (substitution) be?

A

-silent
least harmful as there is no noticeable effect on the protein
If common= Polymorphism

-missense
the change in nucleotide leads for a different amino acid
This may have little effect, or it may greatly change the resulting protein.
Conservative/non-conservative changes of amino acids
The cytosine amino acid most commonly is mutated (CG–>TG)

-Nonsense
the amino acid that should have been coded for is changed to a stop code and the protein terminates at this point (TRUNCATED protein). This will likely lead to a useless protein.

17
Q

Frameshift mutation

A

Alters protein sequence beyond mutation
May truncate protein

When a nucleotide base is either inserted or deleted it disrupts the amino acids coded for from the site of the mutation on to the end of the gene.

18
Q

Dominant inheritance sometimes (not always) results from mutations that result in gain or alteration rather than loss of function

A

Example – achondroplasia

19
Q

Trinucleotide repeat expansions

A

-Polyglutamine repeats (CAG)
Neurodegenerative disorders
Huntington’s disease
Spinocerebellar ataxias

-Large non-coding repeat expansions
Fragile X syndrome (CGG repeats) – transcriptional silencing
Myotonic dystrophy

-Mutational instability
Occasional (eg Huntington’s)
Frequent (eg fragile X-(CGG repeats))