Intro to Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

Examples of unifactorial diseases

A

Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Haemophillia
Phenylketonuria

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2
Q

Polygenic inheritance

A

Phenotype is determined by variants of many genes at diff loci, each allele exerting a small additive effect

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3
Q

Traits showing continuous distribution

A

Determined by interplay of many alleles at diff loci but influenced by environmental factors

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4
Q

Multifactorial

A

Phenotype results from the interaction of environmental (incl in utero environment) and genetic factors

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5
Q

Heritability

A

The proportion of variance in a characteristic attributed to genetic factors for a given pop.

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6
Q

Concordant

A

If both twins have same trait (incl complex disease phenotypes)

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7
Q

Discordant

A

If only one twin has the disease

Freq. of concordance is compared for mz and dz twins

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8
Q

Concordance rates in multifactorial traits

A

Degree of concordance in mz twins exceeds that seen in dz twins but is <100% as a result of diff environmental contributions

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9
Q

When are concordance rates the same in mz and dz twins

A

When the disease is caused directly by environmental factors

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10
Q

What do family and twin studies measure

A

Heritability

Heritability estimates can vary over times and between populations

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11
Q

What does the liability threshold model explain

A

Why we see family clustering for polygenetic and multifactorial traits e.g. heart disease and psychiatric disorders

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12
Q

Examples of autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive monogenic

A

Huntingtion disease

Hereditary haemochromatosis

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13
Q

Huntington disease

A

Classic single gene disorder
Inherited as autosomal dominant trait and underlying mutation has v. high penetrance - the chance that a carrier of the mutation (genotype) will eventually express the disease phenotype too

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14
Q

Mutation leading to Huntington’s

A

Expansion to CAG codon –> expressed as glutamine in the proteins AA sequence
Altered protein is toxic and causes progressive degeneration of the basal ganglia

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15
Q

Altered protein in Huntington’s

A

Altered protein is toxic and causes progressive degeneration of the basal ganglia and cerebral cortex’s resulting in a range of neurological symptoms
Toxic-gain of function phenotype —> degeneration

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16
Q

Transmission of Huntington’s

A

Pedigree shows vertical transmission

17
Q

Anticipation

A

Age of onset decreases w/ successive generations

Seen in several neurological disorders caused by mutations that involve expansions of trinucleotide repeats

18
Q

Hereditary haemochromatosis

A

Used by absorption of too much dietary iron –> accumulates in organs such as liver and heart
Patients have accumulated large iron stores that damage essential organs by the time they are symptomatic so patients present w/ a host of life threatening disease manifestations e.g. liver cancer

19
Q

Treatment of HH

A

Venesection

20
Q

Venesction

A

Removal of blood - done through phlebotomy needle and leg

21
Q

Causes of HH

A

Single nucleotide polymorphisms/ point mutation resulting in change in codons for AA 63 or 282

22
Q

What are recessive genetic diseases usually associated with

A

Mutations that result in loss of normal protein function

23
Q

How does the centromere divide the chromosome

A

Into the short (p) arm and the longer (q) arm

24
Q

Classification of centromeres

A

Done according to the position of the centromere and relative lengths of the p and q arms

Metacentric
Sub metacentric
Acrocentric

25
Q

Metacentric

A

Centromere located midway

26
Q

Sub metacentric

A

Centromeres placed slightly away from centre

27
Q

Acrocentric

A

Centromere placed quite near one end of the chromosome

28
Q

Telomere

A

End of chromosome

29
Q

Isoforms

A

A single gene encodes for two or more isoforms through alternative splicing

30
Q

Alternative splicing

A

Transcripts from coding sequences can be cut up and re-joined in many ways

31
Q

Why can protein and transcript isoforms occur

A

Alternative initiation and termination sites for gene expression —> far fewer coding-genes than potential transcripts and protein sequences

32
Q

Why is plasticity in genome important

A

For tissue spp gene expression