Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

Genetic alteration in fragile X syndrome?. Effect on behavioral development.

A

Expansion trinucleotide repeats (CGG) disorder in long arm of X chromosome - FMR1 (fragile X mental retardation) gene.
Most common inherited cause of intellectual disability (2nd genetic most common cause, 1st Down syndrome).

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2
Q

Which mechanism repair the accelerated deamination of cytosine in DNA? Sequence of reparation. What other changes are repaired by that mechanism?

A
  • Base excision repair ▶️ glycosylases (cleave the altered DNA base - leave an AP [apurinic/apirymidinic] site) ▶️ endonucleases ▶️ lyase (both extract AP site) ▶️ DNA polymerase ▶️ ligase
  • Depurination, alkylation, oxidation
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3
Q

Causes and consequences of the deamination of the DNA

A
  • Spontaneously
  • Exogenous chemicals ▶️ ⬆️ dietary nitrites
  • if not corrected ▶️ mutations ▶️ carcinogenesis
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4
Q

How is the genomic imprinting done and what is it?

A
  • Offspring’s genes are expressed in a parent specific manner→ex; allele from father don’t express, the allele from mother is the only expressed.
  • Methylation→DNA methyltransferase (uses S-adenosyl-methionine [SAM]→methyl group donor) in cytosine, guanine, adenine.
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5
Q

Which is the mutation in fragile X syndrome? What type of epigenetic change does it cause in the DNA? How do you test it?

A
  • “Full mutation” in FMR1 gene (normally 5-55 CGG repeats) ▶️ >200 CGG repeats ▶️ hypermethylation ▶️ 🚫 transcription ▶️ impair neural development
  • Southern blot ▶️ degree of methylation and number of CGG repeats
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6
Q

How do you know when two loci are in linkage disequilibrium?

A

Frequency or probability of 2 alleles to be inherited together > than expected (multiply both independent frequencies)

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7
Q

What is a dominant negative mutation? Example.

A
  • Abnormal gene negatively affects the production of the wild-type gene in the same cell
  • p53 mutation→p53 abnormal protein prevents wild-type p53 from binding to the promoter of its target genes
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8
Q

What would be the phenotype of newborn with karyotype 46XX t(14;21)? what is the disease and the mechanism that cause it?

A
  • Female with Down syndrome by unbalanced Robertsonian translocation→46 chromosomes but 3 copies of chromosome 21.
  • Congenital cardiac defects (VSD), epicanthal folds, upslanting palpebral fissures, protruding tongue, increase skin at nape of neck, low birth weight and length, hypotonia, weak startle reflex (moro).
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9
Q

What genetic diseases are associated with meiotic nondisjunction?

A

Turner syndrome, klinefelter syndrome, trisomies 13, 18, 21.

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10
Q

Why do the turner syndrome patients have short stature?

A

Loss X chromosome→miss SHOX gene→long bone growth

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11
Q

What is the heteroplasmy and what does it explain?

A
  • Random distribution of mitochondria during mitosis between daughter cells▶️some cells with mostly damaged mtDNA and other cells with mostly normal mtDNA
  • Clinical variability of mitochondrial diseases
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12
Q

What paths for processing and handling of mRNA is realized within cytoplasm? And for what?

A

Interaction with P bodies

  • mRNA translation regulation▶️translation repression (content micro RNA→mRNA silencing), storage of mRNA (later release for translation)
  • mRNA degradation, quality control▶️content RNA exonucleases, mRNA decapping enzymes
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13
Q

What proteins can bind to DNA? What allow that property?

A
  • Transcription factors, steroids, thyroid hormones, vitamin D receptors, retinoic acid receptors, DNA transcription and replication proteins. Ex, N-myc (MYC are transcription factors)
  • Can be detected by DNA probes
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14
Q

Function of RNA interference. Types and clinical application of them.

A
  • Posttranscriptional gene silencing
  • small interfering RNA (siRNA), microRNA (miRNA)
  • Silence specific pathogenic genes
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15
Q

What is the DNA laddering? What does it indicate?

A
  • DNA fragmentation in multiples of 180 base pairs in gel electrophoresis▶️action of specific endonucleases during karyorrhexis (may occur when withdraw stimulant factors - IL)
  • Apoptosis

*Fragments absent in malignant cells

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16
Q

What is the germline mosaicism and when do you suspect it? Of what depends the likelihood to be affected?

A
  • Mutation in oocyst or spermatocyte
  • Genetic mutation identified in the offspring but no in the parents
  • Proportion of mosaic to wild-type germ cells in the mosaic parent
17
Q

Differences between DNA and DNA replication of eukaryotes and prokaryotes.

A
  • Prokaryotes→DNA polymerases (I, II, III), circular DNA, single origin of replication
  • Eukaryotes→DNA polymerases (α [primase], β, γ, δ, ε), linear DNA, larger, more complex (>introns), multiple origins of replication
18
Q

Which proteins binds to the stop codons and what is their function?

A

Releasing factors→bind to the ribosome→release of the formed polypeptide chain and dissolution of the ribosome-mRNA complex

19
Q

Most typical mutation of cystic fibrosis, type of mutation.

*Mode of inheritance and frequency.

A

70% of cases (northern europe decent)→F508 mutation→deletion of 3 nucleotides (in frame) of CFTR gene on chromosome 7→loss Phe at position 508 of sequence

Autosomal recessive. Most common lethal genetic disease in Caucasian population.

20
Q

How is regulated the lac operon sequence in a bacteria?

A
  • Negatively→binding of the repressor protein (Lac I gene product) to the operator locus
  • Positively→cAMP-CAP binding upstream from the promoter region
21
Q

Why do you need to know the flanking sequences of the target region to make a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)?

A

To make the primers to star the PCR

22
Q

What is a telomerase?

A

Ribonucleoprotein→add TTAGGG repeats to the 3’ end chromosomes (telomere region)►reverse transcriptase (RNA dependent DNA polymerase)

23
Q

Which cells have abundant telomerase?

A

Cells with long telomeres→embryonic or adult stem cell

- Adult stem cells→Epidermal basal cells, bone marrow stem cells

24
Q

In prokaryotes which is the unique enzyme that has 5’→3’ exonuclease activity and for what?

A

DNA polymerase I→remove RNA primer and repair damaged DNA sequences

*DNA polymerase III→has 5’→3’ polymerase and 3’→5’ exonuclease activity

25
Q

What explain the phenomenom that allow tRNA recognize multiple different codons coding for the same amino acid?

A

Wobble hypothesis→first 2 nucleotide positions on the mRNA codon require traditional (watson-crick) base pairing with their complementary tRNA. 3rd nucleotide “wobble” may undergo nontraditional (less stringent) base pairing

26
Q

Which pairs of base or sequence do the spliceosomes splice? Consequence if mutations at those sites?

A
  • Remove introns containing GU at the 5’ splice site and AG at the 3’ splice site
  • Mutations can lead in inappropriate remove of exons, retention of introns→dysfunctional proteins
27
Q

Examples of Y-linked disorders

A

Retinitis pigmentosa

28
Q

What is the lac-operon and in which type of organism is present?

A

Genome in E. coli (procaryote)→polycistronic gene (feature of bacterial mRNA)→mRNA for a lot of proteins►lactose metabolism

  • Composition:
  • Regulatory gene (i), promoter region (p), operator region (o), three structural genes→z (B-galactosidase), y (permease), a (B-galactoside transacetylase)
29
Q

Pattern of inheritance of androgenic alopecia

A

Polygenic with variable expresivity→short arm of chromosome 20, chromosome X and possibly Y►some genetic factors are X-linked recessive (gene variations in androgen receptor) and others autosomal dominant

*Most common type of hair loss in male and females

30
Q

What is the slipped-strand mispairing and its consequence?

A
  • Mutation process which occurs during DNA replication
  • Since there are some repeated nuleotide sequences widespread in the DNA, a loop may be formed in one strand→mispairing those repeated complementary bases→excision of the loop by repair enzymes►deletion or frameshift mutation seen in subsequent cell progeny

*Some chemicals stabilizes the loop→↑time vulnerable to excision