Causes and Effects of Genetic Variation Flashcards

1
Q

How are bases, large blocks of DNA and chromosomes visualised?

A

1 - Bases: Sequencing.

2 - Large blocks of DNA: Fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH).

3 - Chromosomal: Light microscopy.

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2
Q

Describe the Sanger method of DNA sequencing.

A

1 - A section of DNA to be analysed is amplified by PCR.

2 - A set of fragments of that DNA that differ in length by a single base are produced.

3 - The fragments are separated by size, and the bases at the end of each fragment are identified, recreating the sequence.

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3
Q

List 4 endogenous mechanisms that have the potential to cause DNA damage.

A

1 - Depurination.

2 - Deamination.

3 - Reactive oxygen.

4 - Methylation of cytosines.

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4
Q

What is depurination?

A

The spontaneous fission of the link between a purine base and the ribose sugar, causing a deletion mutation.

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5
Q

How can deamination cause a mutation?

A
  • The loss of the amine group from cytosine, creating uracil.
  • Also causes substitution for an arginine in the new strand.
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6
Q

How can methylation cause a mutation?

A

Methylation of CpG dinucleotides causes spontaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine to thymine (forming a TpG dinucleotide).

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7
Q

What are CpG dinucleotides?

A

Regions of DNA where a cytosine nucleotide is followed by a guanine nucleotide (on the same side of the strand).

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8
Q

What often results from methylation of CpG dinucleotides?

A

Generation of a stop codon (CGA -> TGA).

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9
Q

How can UV light cause DNA damage?

A

By forming cross links between thymines on a DNA strand to form dimers.

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10
Q

How can environmental chemicals cause damage to DNA?

A

1 - By interpolating into DNA.

2 - By causing breaks to the DNA.

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11
Q

What molecule is responsible for correcting DNA replication errors.

How does it do this?

A
  • DNA polymerase.

- During DNA replication, it adds a base, checks it, excises it if it is wrong then moves on.

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12
Q

What is homologous recombination?

A

The process of repairing a DNA double strand break by using the homologous DNA strand.

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13
Q

How is damage to DNA due to ionising radiation and reactive oxygen species corrected?

A

1 - By homologous recombination.

2 - By end-joining broken ends.

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14
Q

Describe the process of end-joining broken ends.

A

Nuclease breaks the regions of DNA between the breaks in both strands so that they are broken to the same point and ligase joins the broken ends.

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15
Q

What is a missense mutation?

A

A mutation that alters the sequence of bases to produce a different sequence of amino acids.

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16
Q

What is a nonsense mutation?

A

A mutation that generates a stop codon.

17
Q

What is the function of a spliceosome?

A

To removes introns from a transcribed pre-mRNA.

18
Q

What might mutations at splice sites cause?

A

1 - Exon skipping (mutation to the acceptor site).

2 - Incorporation of the intron sequence into mRNA (mutation to donor site).

19
Q

What are the names of the regions at the start and end of a splice site?

A
  • Donor site (start).

- Acceptor site (end).

20
Q

How do repeat sequences cause mutations?

A

Repeat sequences predispose to large deletions and duplications as they may cause slipped strand mispairing.

21
Q

What is the effect of Huntington disease on the genome?

A

> 30 CAG repeats.

22
Q

What is the effect of myotonic dystrophy on the genome?

A

> 34 CTG repeats.

23
Q

What is the effect of fragile-X syndrome on the genome?

A

> 50 CGG repeats.

24
Q

How might crossing over result in a mutation?

A

Unequal crossing over between repeat sequences may result in large deletions and insertions.

25
Q

What is copy number variation?

A

Where the number of copies of the same gene varies between individuals.

26
Q

What is a silent mutation?

A

A mutation that alters the sequence of bases but does not alter the sequence of amino acids.