Lecture--Chapter 8 Flashcards

(66 cards)

1
Q

one that uses a light microscope to study the structure and number of chromosomes

A

cytogeneticist

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2
Q

Different species can be distinguished from each other based on:

A

chromosome number, size, and staining

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3
Q

size, position of centromere, banding pattern from stains for:

A

chromosome classification

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4
Q

position of centromere:

A

short arm: p; long arm: q

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5
Q

the number and appearance of chromosomes in the nucleus

A

karyotype

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6
Q

Chromosome classification: banding:

A

light and dark patterns can be enhanced by stains

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7
Q

G bands

A

Geimsa stain; best with prometaphase chromosomes

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8
Q

can be changed by mutation

A

chromosome structure

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9
Q

change in total genetic information:

A
  1. deletions

2. duplications

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10
Q

loss of a chromosomal segment

A

deletions

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11
Q

repetition of a chromosomal segment compared to the normal parent chromosome

A

duplications

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12
Q

Chromosome structure: genetic material/information rearranged:

A
  1. inversions

2. translocations

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13
Q

a change in the direction of part of the genetic material along a single chromosome

A

inversions

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14
Q

segment of one chromosome becomes attached to a non-homologous chromosome

A

translocations

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15
Q

generally associated with a strand break

A

deletions

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16
Q

Phenotypic consequences of deficiencies depends on:

A

the size and nature of the deletion

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17
Q

Autosomal deletions generally cause:

A

growth failure, mental retardation, and multiple malformations

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18
Q

associated with errors during recombination

A

duplications

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19
Q

_____ at misaligned sites with repetitive sequences

A

unequal crossing over

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20
Q

duplications often have:

A

no phenotypic effect

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21
Q

relatively few human syndromes are cause by:

A

small chromosomal duplications; Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease

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22
Q

duplications produce:

A

additional gene copies

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23
Q

The copied genes may accumulate mutations which alter their function: leading to:

A

formation of a gene family

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24
Q

two or more genes derived from a common ancestor

A

homologs

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25
homologous genes within a single species that form a gene family
paralogs
26
oxygen binding paralogs of myoglobin and hemoglobin
human globin genes
27
occur from 2 breaks in a single chromosome with inaccurate repair
inversions
28
inversions are classified according to:
location of centromere
29
most inversions have:
no phenotypic consequences
30
result from breaks in two non-homologous chromosomes with inaccurate repair
translocations
31
balanced, no gene loss
reciprocal translocation
32
unbalanced, often lethal
simple translocation
33
repeat DNA sequences at end of chromosomes
telomeres
34
the participating chromosomes break at their centromeres
Robertsonian translocation
35
Robertsonian translocation occurs on the 5 ___ chromosomes
acrocentric (13, 14, 15, 21, 22)
36
Robertsonian translocation: long arms ___ and short arms ___
fuse together
37
Robertsonian translocation arm fusions can result in ____ in offspring
Down syndrome (trisomy 21)
38
commonly caused by non-disjunction
Down syndrome
39
failure of chromosomes to segregate properly
non-disjunction
40
variation in the number of 1 or more chromosomes within a set; often causes birth defects
aneuploidy
41
variation in the number of complete sets of chromosomes; common in plants, can be beneficial
euploidy
42
results from chromosomes not separating properly during cell division
aneuploidy
43
~ 5 - 10% of embryos have an abnormal chromosome number (non-disjunction); causes ~50% of spontaneous abortions
meiotic error
44
sex chromosome aneuploidies generally have ____
less severe effects
45
results from cytokinesis occurring before nuclear division is complete
euploidy
46
___ is uncommon in animals and usually deleterious
euploidy
47
some diploid and ____ amphibians and reptiles
polyploid
48
some ___ insects
haplodiploid
49
some ____ cells or tissues; mammalian liver cells, insect salivary gland cells
endopolyploid
50
insect salivary gland cells
polytene chromosomes
51
Euploidy is more common in ____
plants; 30-35% of ferns and flowering plants are polyploid
52
genome duplications associated with
rapid speciation
53
Polyploid strains of plants display improved
agricultural characteristics; larger size, more robust, improved disease resistance; triploid species sterile, but often useful (bananas, watermelons)
54
3 natural mechanisms by which the chromosome number of a species can vary:
1. meiotic nondisjunction 2. mitotic nondisjunction 3. interspecies crosses: alloploids
55
chromosomes do not separate properly
meiotic nondisjunction
56
occurs in either meiosis I or meiosis II
meiotic nondisjunction
57
can produce aneuploidy or polyploidy
meiotic nondisjunction
58
2 or more populations of cells that have different genotypes in an individual that came from 1 fertilised egg
mosaic
59
occurs after fertilisation
mitotic nondisjunction
60
usually only a subset of cells are affected, mosaic
mitotic nondisjunction
61
chromosomes from 2 species
alloploids
62
usually closely related plant species
interspecies crosses
63
more fertile
allotetraploids
64
experimental treatments can produce ___ plants
autopolyploid
65
experimental treatments can lead to
abrupt temperature changes
66
a chemical that binds to tubulin of the spindle apparatus
colchicine