Complex (non-mendelian) inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

What is penetrance?

A

The frequency with which a trait is manifested by individuals carrying a gene.

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2
Q

What is incomplete penetrance?

A

When not every individual in a populations with a gene expresses the trait.

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3
Q

Define precision/personalised medicine?

A

Checking someones DNA mutations culd be used to tell their risk of developing a disease (e.g. breast cancer) based on the penetrance amonst othe people with the same genes,

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4
Q

What are genetic modifiers in terms of penetrance?

A

Genes with a small quantitative effect on the level of expression of another gene.

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5
Q

What else effects penetrance?

A

Enviromental factors like lifestyle, air polutions, alcohol, diet etc.

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6
Q

What is an imprinted gene?

A

An imprinted gene is silenced or deactivated.

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7
Q

How does genomic imprinting effect inheritance?

A

An epigenetic phenomonon.
If the gene inherited from one of the aprents is imprinted then only the gene from the other is expressed leading to a mono-allelic child.

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8
Q

Why do imprinted genes has a higher risk of mutation?

A

Because they only have one active allele so they are more susceptible to mutations.

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9
Q

From which parent does mitochondrial DNA come?

A

Mitochondrial DNA is entirely Maternal

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10
Q

Why does mitochondrial DNA have a much higher mutation rate than the nuclear genome?

A
  • LAcks efficient DNA repair system
  • Lacks protective proteins like histones
  • Is damaged by reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as free radicals
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11
Q

What is Homoplasmy?

A

When the mtDNA is uniform within a cell

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12
Q

What is heteroplasmy?

A

When the mtDNA in the mitochondria of a cell is different (i.e. some are mutated)

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13
Q

What is the effect on disease of mitochondiral inheritance?

A

Diseases cuased by mutated mtDNA are more serious the higher the percentage of mutated mtDNA

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14
Q

Why is a cell’s mtDNA often polyploidy?

A

Each cell has thousands of mitochondria and 2-10 copies of DNA in each.

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15
Q

What does anticipation mean?

A

Diseases that present younger or more severely in succeeding generations.

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16
Q

Examples of diseases that show anticipation:

A

Triplet repeat diseases like huntingtons & myotonic dystrophy.

17
Q

What is huntingtons?

A

The normal persons huntington’s gene has 11-34 repeating copy of CAG
The mutant gene has 36-120 copies.