Lecture 12 Flashcards

1
Q

What are single copy genes?

A

Unique sequences in the genome that code for a protein:

receptors, enzymes, hormones, structural cellular elements, etc

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2
Q

What are multigene families?

A

Genes with similar functions that have arisen by gene duplication

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3
Q

Explain classic gene families and gene superfamilies?

A

Classic - multicopy genes that show a high degree of homology

superfamilies: multicopy genes with similar function but limited gene homology

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4
Q

What is the purpose of extragenic DNA?

A

makes up majority of our DNA (junk DNA)
transcriptionally inactive
might play a part in gene regulation

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5
Q

What are the types of DNA variation?

A
  1. SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism)
  2. SSR (simple sequence repeat)
  3. VNTR
  4. LCR (low copy repeat)
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6
Q

Explain SNPs

A

most do not have an associated phenotype

1 percent = common variation

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7
Q

Explain SSRs

A

These are tandem repeats of 2, 3 or 4 bp, repeated many times

helpful in forensics and paternity testing

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8
Q

LCR?

A

these are normally large sequences

may lead to mispairing in meiosis and mitosis

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9
Q

Talk about Long Interspersed Nuclear Elements (LINEs ~6000 base pairs)

A

found in large amounts in eukaryotes

they are able to make RNA and they include a gene for reverse transcriptase

LINES can copy themselves due to the enzyme

could lead to mutation

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10
Q

Talk about Short interspersed nuclear elements (SINEs)

A

short sequences (10% of the genome)

Does not have a Reverse transcriptase, thus must use LINEs

Most common SINE is the Alu sequence

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11
Q

What are pseudogenes?

A

Sequences that look like real genes but are not functional

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12
Q

Where do mitochondria come from (which parent)?

A

Mother

more prone to mutation

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13
Q

What is a Metacentric chromosome?

A

p and q arms are of equal length. (chromosome 1)

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14
Q

What is a Submetacentric chromosome?

A

p arm is shorter than the q arm (chromosome 4)

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15
Q

what is an Acrocentric chromosome

A

p arm contains little genetic info (chromosomes 13, 14, 15, 21, 22)

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16
Q

Visualization of chromosomes during metaphase is what technique?

A

karyotyping

17
Q

What is X-inactivation ?

A

One of the X-chromosome is inactivated and condensed to form the Barr body in females

This is random and fixed

18
Q

What regulates X-inactivation?

A

X-inactivation is regulated by a region called X inactivation center (Xic) that has the gene, XIST gene involved in inactivation

Methylation of cytosine bases (CG islands) and histone deacetylation, result in transcriptional repression

19
Q

Allele vs locus

A

allele - different versions of the same gene

locus - refers to its location on a chromosome