Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

models of nature vs. nurture relationship

A
  • all nature/all nurture
  • additive model
  • interactive model
  • transactional model
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2
Q

all nature/all nurture model

A

can’t use these models -> every physical psychological and physical trait have some influence from both nature or nurture

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3
Q

additive model

A
  • each trait is sum of nature vs. Nurture
  • this lacks complexity -> it looks at nature vs. Nurture one time and assumes they’re binary (either low or high)
  • simple and linear
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4
Q

interactive model

A
  • nature and nurture exist on a spectrum and interact together to create outcomes
  • however, this focuses on one time only
  • non-linear (like plants growing at different heights)
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5
Q

transactional model

A
  • recognizes that nature and nurture interact constantly throughout the lifespan
  • nature and nurture influence each other
  • spectral
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6
Q

genotype

A
  • genetic material an individual inherits; constant across the lifespan
  • Genetics can change, but the code/genotype itself cannot
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7
Q

phenotype

A
  • observable characteristics of the genotype, including physical and behavioural characteristics
  • Ex. Eye colour, outgoing behaviour
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8
Q

environment

A

every aspect of the individual and her experiences other than the genes themselves

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9
Q

epigenome

A
  • heritable chemical changes to gene expression
  • Epigenome tells genome when/how to work -> tells our cells which cells they should be (hair, heart, etc.) by turning them on/off
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10
Q

chromosomes

A
  • 46 chromosomes -> 23 pairs

- One chromosome from each pair comes from each parent

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11
Q

DNA

A
  • Genetic info made of long strings of DNA -> building blocks of genetic material
  • DNA made of base pairs
  • Every cell in your body has the same DNA
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12
Q

if every cell in your body has the same DNA, why aren’t all your cells the same?

A
  • Some genes are turned on/off at different points in development or at different locations to create different cell types, etc.
  • Ex. Genes that are responsible for secondary sex characteristics are present throughout the life time, but aren’t turned on until puberty
  • Ex. Genes that are responsible for red blood cells are never turned on in hair cells
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13
Q

5 types of nature/nurture interactions

A
  • Parent’s genotype -> child’s genotype
  • Child’s genotype -> child’s phenotype
  • Child’s environment -> child’s phenotype
  • Child’s phenotype -> child’s environment
  • Child’s environment -> child’s genotype
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14
Q

Parent’s genotype -> child’s genotype

A
  • Variations in genetics amongst children from the same parents
  • due to random assortment, crossing over, and/or mutations
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15
Q

random assortment

A
  • You only get 1 chromosome for each pair from each parent, and whichever one you get is random
  • Chromosomes are shuffled in the process of gamete (egg and sperm) formation
  • Unlike all our other cells, gametes only have 23 chromosomes
  • Results in 2^23 possible combinations -> chances are genetically 0 that two sperms/eggs will be the exact same
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16
Q

crossing over

A

Division of germ cells in embryonic development results in shuffling of DNA sections

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17
Q

mutations

A
  • Errors in DNA transcription
  • Some mutations are invisible, but some create inviable gametes/fetuses (resulting in fetal death), or maladaptive characteristics
  • A minority of mutations are adaptive rather than maladaptive -> result in gradual evolution of the species
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18
Q

Child’s genotype -> child’s phenotype

A
  • Although every cell in the body contains all of an individual’s genetic material, only some of those genes are expressed at a given time
  • Some are switched on during cell differentiation (eg. To form limbs, brain cells, blood cells)
  • Activated/deactivated by regulator genes
  • Some recessive genes are never expressed at all
  • Most of the differences between humans are due to gene expression, not genetic differences (1-1.5% variation in the population)
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19
Q

Child’s environment -> child’s phenotype

A
  • Norm of reaction: the range of all phenotypes that could theoretically result from one given genome
  • Growing up in a rich vs. Impoverished environment can influence the expression of genes
  • Ex. Genetic predisposition to be taller than average, but undernourished as an infant -> end up at average height
  • Ex. Genetic predisposition to be extroverted, but experience trauma as an infant -> introverted
    Genetic experiences put you in a certain range, but your experiences move you up or down in the range
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20
Q

Child’s phenotype -> child’s environment

A
  • Reflects the active child theme
  • Children change their own environments based on their phenotypes
  • Ex. A child with a predisposition for low sustained attention may choose activities that require less attention
  • Ex. Choosing to be active and play outside rather than sitting in once place and reading a book
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21
Q

Child’s environment -> child’s genotype

A
  • Environment can cause changes in gene expression
  • Epigenetics
  • Gene silencing: methylation (addition of methyl group to DNA) prevents transcription
  • While one’s genome is constant throughout lifespan, the epigenome changes
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22
Q

shared genome in humans

A
  • Humans share 99% of the human genome
  • Gene expression is what changes in order to make us different from each other
  • Allows us to have genetic similarities but phenotypic differences
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23
Q

epigenetics

A
  • The fifth type of nature-nurture interaction (child’s environment – child’s genotype)
  • Experience mother has affects genetic expression in offspring, and that epigenetic change is inheritable by the next generation
  • Genetic expression = turning on/off
  • Can change during critical periods (ie. Pregnancy, puberty)
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24
Q

Human and non-human epigenetics examples

A
  • Rats: changing pregnant rat diet to create obese or thin offspring (and offspring of that offspring)
  • People: famine post-WWII affected babies of mothers who had gone through the famine (even though the famine happened before they got pregnant) -> ex. Offspring had difficulty regulating body weight. This was also shown in the grandchildren of people who experienced famine
25
Q

forebrain vs. midbrain vs. hindbrain

A
  • Forebrain: structures responsible for cognition, perception, etc.
  • Midbrain: responsible for basic functions (ex. Transmitting info from spinal cord to brain)
  • Hindbrain: primitive, responsible for basic functions (ex. Respiration)
26
Q

infant brain development - brain structures and timing

A
  • 3 main brain structures differentiated at 26 days -> midbrain and hindbrain are quite large at this stage
  • Once born, baby’s brain structures and sizes are quite similar to our own adult brains
27
Q

neurons

A
  • Cells in nervous system that communicate with one another to perform information-processing tasks
  • 100 billion of them; make up grey matter
  • Pass information to each other so we can do things
  • 3 main types of neurons: Sensory neurons, Motor neurons, Interneurons
  • billions of neurons throughout the body
28
Q

sensory neurons

A
  • Communicate information from outside world to brain

- ex. Sound, touch, taste, odor, vision

29
Q

motor neurons

A
  • Communicate information from spinal cord to muscles

- Allows us to move

30
Q

interneurons

A
  • Connect sensory neurons, motor neurons, or other interneurons
  • Most common
31
Q

cell body

A

cell’s life support centre

32
Q

nucleus

A

contains chromosomes with DNA

33
Q

dendrites

A

receive messages from other cells

34
Q

axon

A

passes messages away from cell body to other nuerons, muscles, or glands

35
Q

neural impulse/action potential

A

electrical signal traveling down the axon

36
Q

terminal branches of axon

A

form junctions with other cells

37
Q

myelin sheaths

A
  • Covers the axon of some neurons to help speed up neural impulse
  • Breaks in between myelin = nodes of Ranvier -> speed process up -> signal can jump from sheath to sheath
  • Formed by glial cells (support cells)
38
Q

neural tube formation

A

1-2 day old embryo has formed into ectoderm (outer layer), mesoderm (middle layer), and endoderm (inner layer)

39
Q

ectoderm

A
  • skin cells, neuron on brain, pigment cells
  • As new cells are added to the ectoderm, the neural groove begins to form
  • As the groove closes, the neural tube is formed
    This neural tube will eventually form the brain and spinal cord
40
Q

mesoderm

A
  • cardiac and skeletal muscle cells, kidney tubules, red blood cells, smooth muscle cells in gut
41
Q

endoderm

A
  • lung, thyroid, and digestive cells
42
Q

neurogenesis

A
  • Cell division in the new neural tube occurs rapidly starting in the 3rd/4th week of gestation
  • Neural stem cells divide -> some become neural support cells or glial cells, small amount become neurons, about half die off
  • Complete by 18 weeks
  • New neurons then migrate to their permanent location and form axons and dendrites to communicate with other neurons
43
Q

myelination (when it happens, what it does)

A
  • Myelin sheaths necessary for information transmission are mostly formed in the third trimester of gestation
  • Much myelin production occurs after birth in the infancy, childhood, and adolescent years
  • Speeds up information processing
44
Q

synaptogenesis (when does it happen)

A
  • A lot of synaptogenesis occurs before birth
  • However, visual cortex synaptogenesis peaks right after birth since we can finally see
  • Prefrontal cortex continues to increase through toddler-hood and into the early elementary school years
45
Q

synaptic pruning

A
  • There is an overaboundance of synapses at birth, resulting in exhuberant connectivity (may result in infant synesthesia, since it’s much more common for infants than adults)
  • These synapses are slowly pruned away after birth throughout infancy, childhood, and adolescence
  • Synaptic pruning occurs by: Axon degeneration and shedding, and Axon retraction
  • Sensitive periods and plasticity in development -> infant brain much more plastic and malleable than adult brain is -> exuberant connectivity allows for easier learning -> this gets pruned throughout the development
46
Q

genes

A
  • segments of DNA
  • anology: If DNA is a building, genes are rooms in that building
  • humans have 21,000 genes and share most of them with all living things
47
Q

alleles

A
  • 2 or more different forms of a gene
  • can be dominant (gets expressed) ex. brown hair, or recessive (not expressed if dominant allele is present) ex. blonde hair
48
Q

homozygous vs. heterozygous

A
  • homozygous: having two of the same alleles for a trait

- heterozygous: having two different alleles for a trait -> only dominant one is expressed

49
Q

norm of reaction

A

all the phenotypes that can theoretically result from a given genotype in relation to all the environments in which it can survive and develop (ex. plants growing at different altitudes)

50
Q

behaviour genetics

A
  • science concerned with how variation in behaviour and development results from combo of genetic and environmental factors
  • why are we different?
  • traits that are polygenetic (affected by many genes) and multifactorial (affected by many environmental factors) can account for diversity
51
Q

cerebral cortex

A

grey matter of brain that plays a primary role in “human-like functioning” - seeing, hearing, writing, feeling emotion, etc.

52
Q

spines

A
  • formations on the dendrites of neurons that increase the dendrites’ capacity to form connections with other neurons
  • part of neurogenesis
53
Q

experience-expectant plasticity

A
  • the role of general human experience in shaping brain development - ex. patterned visual stimulation, voices and sounds
  • the brain can rely on and expect input from these sources to help shape it and fine-tune it
54
Q

experience-dependent plasticity

A

the process through which neural connections are created and reorganized throughout life as a function of an individual’s experiences

55
Q

sensitive period for brain damage

A
  • has worst effects during prenatal development and in the first year after birth, when neurogenesis is occurring
  • if damage occurs in early childhood, there’s a good chance the brain can rewire itself and recover
56
Q

body development

A
  • humans spend 20% of life growing
  • growth of body parts is uneven -ex. head measures 50% of body at 2 months, but 10% at adulthood
  • proportion of body fat is greatest in infancy and decreases into early childhood
57
Q

failure to thrive

A

a condition in which infants become malnourished and fail to grow or gain weight for no obvious medical reason

58
Q

breastfeeding and cognitive development

A

has positive effect on cognitive development and may increase IQ scores

59
Q

what can infants taste?

A

sweet, sour, bitter