Lecture 7 Flashcards
(46 cards)
mutation
any permanent change in the DNA
chromosome mutation
is a change in the structure or arrangement of the chromosomes
Aneuploidy
excess or deficiency in a single chromosome. The name refers to the number of copies of the abnormal chromosome
2n+1=7
Polyploidy
addition of one of more complete sets of chromosomes
3n=9
Duplication mutation
- a portion of the chromosome has been doubled. -Duplicated region can be on the same chromosome or a different chromosome.
tandem mutation
the duplicated region is immediately adjacent to the original region
displaced mutation
the duplicated segment is located some distance from the original segment, on the same chromosome, or a different chromosome
reverse duplication
the inverted orientation of a duplication
homozygous individual for a mutation
carries it on both homologous chromosomes
heterozygous individual for a mutation
there is one normal chromosome and one with the duplication
What happens to the duplicated chromosome during pairing in prophase 1?
it loops out so that the homologous regions align
imbalances in the amounts of gene products
abnormal gene dosage
deletion mutation
the loss of a chromosomal segment
If the deletion includes the centromere
the chromosome will not segregate during mitosis or meiosis and will be lost
psuedominance
normally recessive mutations on the homologous chromosome lacking the deletion may be expressed when the wild type allele has been deleted (and no longer masks the recessive allele’s expression).
Haploinsufficient gene
When a single copy of a gene is not sufficient to produce a wild type phenotype
Inversion
- a chromosome region is flipped 180 degrees
- individuals have not lost or gained genetic information
- may break a gene into 2 parts or move to a new location
- can cause position effects. If position is altered it can cause inappropriate temporal or spatial expression.
Pericentric
inversions that include the centromere
- one centromere will appear on each product
Paracentric
inversions that occur outside of the centromere
- the product will be a chromatid with two centromeres and one with none
Heterozygous for paracentric inversion
- two gametes contain wild-type non recombinant chromosomes
- the other two contain recombinant chromosomes that are missing some genes; these gametes will not produce viable offspring
heterozygous for pericentric inversion
- recombinant gamers are nonviable because genes are either mission or present in too many copies.
Translocation
a segment of a chromosome moves from one chromosome to a nonhomologous chromosome or to another place on the same chromosome
Nonreciprocal (Unbalanced) Translocations
- loss of DNA
- A chromosomal segment moves from one chromosome to another without any reciprocal exchange
Reciprocal (Balanced) Translocations
- no loss of DNA
- two way exchange of segments between chromosomes
- cause problems if the breakpoints are in the middle of a gene or if position effects places genes under different regulation