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Gregor Mendel
Father of genetics, studies inheritance
Genes
DNA segments that serve as the key functional units in hereditary transmission. Called heredity factors by Mendel
Phenotype
An organism's physical appearance, or visible traits.
Genotype
An organism's genetic makeup, or allele combinations. AA, Aa
Karyotype
A display of the chromosome pairs of a cell arranged by size and shape. Looking for chromosomal abnormalities.
Pedigree
A chart or "family tree" that tracks which members of a family have a particular trait. If every generation shows trait, suggests that trait is dominant
Homozygous
An organism that has two identical alleles for a trait AA or aa
Heterozygous
An organism that has two different alleles for a trait Aa
Phenotype ratios when crossing homozygous dominate to recessive and then into the F2 generation. AA x aa
3 dominant : 1 recessive
Phenotypic ratio for dihybrid if both parents are heterozygous for both traits. AaBb x AaBb
9:3:3:1
ABO blood groups
Genetically determined by multiple alleles
polygenic traits
traits controlled by two or more genes, human height
incomplete dominance
Situation in which one allele is not completely dominant over another allele, see blending of traits. Red (RR) x white(WW) makes pink (RW)
dominant disorders
Achondroplasia, Huntington's disease
sex-linked traits
Traits controlled by genes located on X chromosome. Colorblindness & hemophilia are recessive
genetic map
distances between gene loci along a particular chromosome, determined by recombination frequency
independent assortment
Independent segregation of genes during the formation of gametes, will occur if allele pairs are on different chromosomes
Crossing over
Process in which homologous chromosomes exchange portions of their chromatids during meiosis.
Pleiotropy
The ability of a single gene to have multiple effects. Cystic fibrosis & sickle cell anemia
Nondisjunction
Error in meiosis in which chromosomes or chromatids fail to separate. Unequal number of chromosomes in gametes
Turner Syndrome
A chromosomal disorder in females in which either an X chromosome is missing, making the person XO instead of XX, or part of one X chromosome is deleted.
Klinefelter syndrome
A chromosomal disorder in which males have an extra X chromosome, making them XXY instead of XY.
Jacob's Syndrome
XYY males
SRY gene
sex determining region of the Y chromosome, if mutated/deleted then develop as female
Relationship between recombination frequency and physical distance on a chromosome
As distance increases, recombination frequency will reach and level off at .5
Mitochondrial DNA
DNA found in the mitochondria that is inherited only through mothers
SNPs
are single base differences in DNA that vary among individuals, can be used in forensics
Central Dogma
DNA -> RNA -> Protein
protein synthesis phases
transcription and translation
mRNA (messenger RNA)
The form of RNA which is created as a blueprint from DNA; carries instructions for making a protein
tRNA (transfer RNA)
The form of RNA that carries each amino acid to the ribosome to form the polypeptide chain (protein)
rRNA (ribosomal RNA)
type of RNA that makes up the major part of ribosomes
snRNA
small nuclear RNA, used to remove introns
miRNA
micro RNA, regulates gene expression, binds directly to mRNA to form double stranded RNA which prevents translation
Transcription
synthesis of an mRNA molecule from a DNA template, occurs in the nucleus for eukaryotes, RNA polymerase must have access to DNA and bind to promoter
Translation
Process by which mRNA is decoded and a protein is produced, occurs in the cytoplasm
Splicing
the process of removing introns and reconnecting exons in a mRNA
Codon
three-base sequence on messenger RNA that codes for a single amino acid, AUG
Anti-codon
group of three bases on a tRNA molecule that are complementary to an mRNA codon
peptide bond
covalent bond formed between amino acids to form proteins
phosphodiester bond
the type of bond that links the nucleotides in DNA or RNA.
hydrogen bond
Attraction between a slightly positive hydrogen atom and a slightly negative atom.
Prokaryotic Protein Synthesis
Translation of mRNA begins before transcription is complete. No introns and exons
Eukaryotic Protein Synthesis
DNA in nucleus, linear chromosomes, DNA wound on histone proteins, mRNA is modified, introns and exons, transcription and translation happen separately
mRNA modifications in eukaryotes
3' poly A tail, 5' cap and removal of introns
transcription initiation complex
The completed assembly of transcription factors at TATA box and RNA polymerase bound to a promoter.
substitution mutation
A mutation in which 1 base or a codon in DNA is replaced with a different base, protein may not function properly
silent mutation
A mutation that changes a single nucleotide, but does NOT change the amino acid created.
nonsense mutation
changes a normal codon into a stop codon, results in a shorter than normal protein
Deletion or insertion mutation
The production of entirely different or nonfunctional protein due to frame shift
Major groove of DNA
main site of protein binding to regulate gene expression
operon organization
regulatory genes, promotor, operator, genes
(upstream) (downstream)
Nucleosome
Bead-like structure in eukaryotic chromatin, composed of a short length of DNA wrapped around a core of histone proteins
Histones
protein molecules around which DNA is tightly coiled
lac operon
the operon that controls the metabolism of lactose
lac repressor
a protein that binds to the operator site of the lac operon and inhibits transcription, if mutated then energy and materials wasted if no lactose present
operon
A unit of genetic function common in bacteria (prokaryotes), consisting of regulated genes with related functions.
promoter region of DNA
where RNA polymerase attaches and where initiation of mRNA begins
Enhancers
A segment of eukaryotic DNA containing multiple control elements, usually located upstream from the gene whose transcription it regulates.
methylated histones
DNA is not transcribed, inactive chromatin
translation repressor proteins
proteins that prevents translation of mRNA by binding to the mRNA and preventing ribosome attachment
ubiquitinated proteins
are degraded by proteasomes
Nucleases
Enzymes that break down nucleic acids such as mRNA by 5' decapping, remove poly A tail and degrade recognition sites
one gene-one protein hypothesis
there is one gene that codes for one protein, not true due to alternative splicing so produce different proteins in different tissues
trp operon
tryptophan binds to the repressor protein and enables it to repress gene transcription.