Chromosomes, genes and inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

List the 3 components of chromosomes

A

Telomeres at the tip
Centromere
Chromatin (Euchromatin + heterochromatin)

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2
Q

Describe a telomere

A

Protects end of chromosome from deterioration or fusion with neighbouring chromosomes

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3
Q

What is DNA packaged with in chromosomes

A

histone proteins

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4
Q

How many histones in a nucleosome (further wrapping)

A

8

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5
Q

Describe euchromatin

A

Open and under active transcription

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6
Q

Describe heterochromatin

A

tightly packed, dense and silenced

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7
Q

What is the purpose of packaging DNA

A

negatively charged DNA neutralised by positive histones
DNA takes up less space
Inactive DNA can be folded into accessible locations until required

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8
Q

Define genotype and phenotype

A

Genotype - Full genome of individual (even if not expressed)
Phenotype - Physical manifestation eg appearance, behaviour

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9
Q

How many geneotypes are there in the population

A

800AA + 190Aa + 10aa = 1000

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10
Q

How many alleles are there in the population

A

1600AA + (190A + 190a) + 20aa = 2000

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11
Q

What is the genotype frequency

A

p2 + 2pq + q2

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12
Q

What is the allele frequency

A

p:q

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13
Q

Do gene frequencies change

A

No they remain constant

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14
Q

What factors does the HWE equation assume

A
Ignores mutation
Migration is negligible
Mating is random
There is a large population
Allele frequencies are equal in sexes
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15
Q

What does the HWE equal

A

AA: Aa : aa =1

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16
Q

Define fitness of alleles

A

Relative ability to survive and pass on genes

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17
Q

Does Autosomal dominant inheritance skip generations

A

NO

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18
Q

Does autosomal dominant inheritance favour a generation

A

No equal in male and females

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19
Q

What is a childs chance of inheriting an autosomal dominant disease?

A

50%

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20
Q

Do affeceted parents have affected children in autosomal recessive inheritance

A

No, the children are carriers.

21
Q

Can autosomal recessive skip generations?

A

yes

22
Q

Can heterozygous parents have affected kids in autosomal recessive

A

Yes, if child innherits both mutated alleles.

23
Q

Who is most commonly affected in X-linked inheritance?

A

males - they only inherit one X

24
Q

Can X-linked inheritance skip generations?

A

yes

25
Q

What type of transmission does not occur in X-linked inheritance

A

Male to male

26
Q

Describe factors of non mendelian inheritance

A
  • incomplete penetrance
  • genomic imprinting (different mutated chromosomes)
  • environmental factors
  • genetic modifiers
27
Q

Give examples of non- mendelian inheritance

A

triple repeat disorders

mitochondrial mutations

28
Q

Give examples of Autosomal dominant diseases

A

Huntingtons (neuro-degenerative)

Achondroplasia - dwarf

29
Q

Give examples of X-linked diseases

A

Duchene muscular dystrophy (degeneration of muscle tissue)
Hemophilia - disorder of blood clotting
Red/ green colour blindness

30
Q

Define gene point mutations and list examples

A

Minor change, affecting 1 amino acid - protein may still function
Substitution, Missense, Nonsense, Silent

31
Q

Describe silent mutations

A

Replaced nucelotide codes for same amino acid

eg. CGA (Arg) –> CGC (Arg)

32
Q

Describe substitution mutations

A

Nuclotide is replaced with another (changes codon)

33
Q

Describe missense mutations

A

Altered codon codes for a different protein

34
Q

Describe Nonsense mutations

A

Altered codon acts as a stop codon so protein can’t function

35
Q

Explain degeneracy

A

amino acids are coded for by more than one codon (20 amino acids)
So if single mutations occur (esp. 3rd base - wobble) protein will not be altered

36
Q

What are the exceptions to degeneracy

A

methionine and tryptophan

37
Q

Describe deletion chromosome mutations

A

Chromosome breaks in 2 places, losing a section and forming a shorter chromosome

38
Q

Describe insertion chromosome mutations

A

Segment becomes reversed (broken off, turned, reattached) - Balanced rearrangements

39
Q

What are balanced rearrangements

A

Mutations where although the shape of the chromosome is altered all the genetic information is still there

40
Q

Describe insertion chromosome mutations

A

Gains segment from another chromosome

41
Q

Describe translocation chromosome mutations

A

Segment breaks off and is added to another chromosome

42
Q

Describe reciprocal translocation chromosome mutations

A

2 new derivative chromosomes formed

43
Q

Describe robertsonian translocation chromosome mutations

A

Fusion of two acrocentric chromosomes

44
Q

Give examples of autosomal chromosome mutations

A

Trisomy 21 - Down’s syndrome
trisomy 13 - Patau (non-dysjunction)
trisomy 16 - Edwards

45
Q

Give examples of sex related chromosome mutations

A

(45, X) 45 chromosomes, one X - Turners syndrome (females)

47, XXY - Klinefelter syndrome

46
Q

Describe de novo mutations

A

New mutation occurs in germ cell of parent and passes to of spring
No family history of cancer

47
Q

List ways of chromosome mutation testing

A
PCR
gel electrophoresis (electric field seperates fragments by size)
RFLP 
ARMS
DNA sequencing
48
Q

Describe the process of PCR

A
  1. denature DNA (90-95)
  2. Anneal primers (50-70)
  3. Extension- polymerase adds nucleotides to 3’ end(70-75)
49
Q

How much DNA does one cycle of PCR produce

A

doubles it - amplify