Lecture 7 Flashcards

(46 cards)

1
Q

mutation

A

any permanent change in the DNA

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2
Q

chromosome mutation

A

is a change in the structure or arrangement of the chromosomes

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3
Q

Aneuploidy

A

excess or deficiency in a single chromosome. The name refers to the number of copies of the abnormal chromosome

2n+1=7

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4
Q

Polyploidy

A

addition of one of more complete sets of chromosomes

3n=9

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5
Q

Duplication mutation

A
  • a portion of the chromosome has been doubled. -Duplicated region can be on the same chromosome or a different chromosome.
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6
Q

tandem mutation

A

the duplicated region is immediately adjacent to the original region

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7
Q

displaced mutation

A

the duplicated segment is located some distance from the original segment, on the same chromosome, or a different chromosome

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8
Q

reverse duplication

A

the inverted orientation of a duplication

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9
Q

homozygous individual for a mutation

A

carries it on both homologous chromosomes

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10
Q

heterozygous individual for a mutation

A

there is one normal chromosome and one with the duplication

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11
Q

What happens to the duplicated chromosome during pairing in prophase 1?

A

it loops out so that the homologous regions align

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12
Q

imbalances in the amounts of gene products

A

abnormal gene dosage

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13
Q

deletion mutation

A

the loss of a chromosomal segment

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14
Q

If the deletion includes the centromere

A

the chromosome will not segregate during mitosis or meiosis and will be lost

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15
Q

psuedominance

A

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).

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16
Q

Haploinsufficient gene

A

When a single copy of a gene is not sufficient to produce a wild type phenotype

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17
Q

Inversion

A
  • 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.
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18
Q

Pericentric

A

inversions that include the centromere

- one centromere will appear on each product

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19
Q

Paracentric

A

inversions that occur outside of the centromere

- the product will be a chromatid with two centromeres and one with none

20
Q

Heterozygous for paracentric inversion

A
  • 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
21
Q

heterozygous for pericentric inversion

A
  • recombinant gamers are nonviable because genes are either mission or present in too many copies.
22
Q

Translocation

A

a segment of a chromosome moves from one chromosome to a nonhomologous chromosome or to another place on the same chromosome

23
Q

Nonreciprocal (Unbalanced) Translocations

A
  • loss of DNA

- A chromosomal segment moves from one chromosome to another without any reciprocal exchange

24
Q

Reciprocal (Balanced) Translocations

A
  • 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
25
Meiosis in a heterozygote for a reciprocal translocation
- because each chromosome has sections that are homologous to two other chromosomes, a crosslike configuration forms in prophase 1 - in anaphase I the chromosomes separate in one of three different ways (alternate segregation, adjacent-1 segregation, and adjacent-2 segregation)
26
Gametes resulting from adjacent-1 and adjacent-2 segregation
are nonviable because some genes are present in two copies, whereas others are missing
27
Robertson translocation
- the long arms of two chromosomes with centromeres near -the end become joined to a common centromere through a translocation - generates a long chromosomes with a centromere near the middle and another chromosome with two very short arms.
28
Nullisomy
loss of both members of a homologous pair of chromosomes 2n-2
29
Monosomy
loss of a single chromosome 2n-1
30
Trisomy
gain of a single chromosome 2n+1
31
Tetrasomy
gain of a pair of homologous chromosomes 2n+2
32
nondisjunction
- the failure of homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids to separate in mitosis or meiosis - usually alters the phenotype drastically - most mutations are lethal, most likely due to abnormal gene dosage
33
Aneuploidy through nondisjunction in Meiosis
- Nondisjunction in Meiosis 1 results in two trisomic and two monosomic - Nondisjunction in Meiosis 2 results in trisomic, monosomic, and two normal diploid - the earlier it happens the more severe it will be
34
The most common aneuploidy in humans
Trisomy 21 or Down syndrome
35
Down Syndrome
- arises from nondisjunction in egg formation
36
Familial Down syndrome
- not trisomic for a complete chromosome 21 - they have 45 chromosomes but an extra copy of part of chromosome 21 is attached to another chromosome through a translocation - tends to run in families - arises in offspring whose parents are carriers of chromosomes that have undergone a robertson translocation between chromosomes 21 and 14. The long arm of 21 and the short arm of 14 exchange places
37
Nondisjunction in a mitotic division
may generate patches of cells in which every cell has a chromosome abnormality and other patches in which every cell has a normal karyotype
38
mosaicism
regions of tissue with different chromosome constitutions
39
polyploidy
- the presence of more than two sets of chromosomes | - common in plants is a major mechanism by which new plant species have evolved.
40
autopolyploidy
- chromosome sets are from a single species - due to accidents of meiosis or mitosis that produce extra sets of chromosomes - the chromosomes are homologous and attempt to align in prophase I of meiosis, which usually ends in sterility.
41
allopolypoloidy
- chromosome sets are from two or more species - poloidy involves non homologous sets of chromosomes - arises from hybridization between two species - hybrid chromosomes are not homologous, so they will not pair and segregate in meiosis. - hybrid functionally haploid and sterile - can be fertile if nondisjunction occurs at an early mitotic cell division
42
Steps for doing an inversion problem
1. decide if it pericentric or paracentric 2. draw the prophase 1 loop - line up letters that are the same - label the centromeres 3. Draw an X where there recombination event has occurred 4. Determine the chromatids by following each line - make sure you have one of each chromatid end (label the end or check off each time you use an end) - after recombination chromatids may or may not have a single copy of each gene
43
duplications usually arise from
unequal crossing over during meiosis
44
Individuals homozygous for translocation
meiosis is normal
45
Klinefelter
XXY | aneuploidy in sex chromosomes
46
Turner
single X | aneuploidy in sex chromosomes