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SNP
single nucleotide polymorphism
SINGLE BASE CHANGE IN A REGION OF DNA
STR/VNTR
Short tandem repeat/ Variable number tandem repeat
there is a number of repeats in a row
restriction endonucleases
cut (digest) DNA at or near specific recognition sites
DNA probe
fragment of DNA that can be radioactively labeled
DNA fingerprinting
the idea of looking at a combination of all the different bands
Alec Jeffreys
father of DNA fingerprinting
Allele:
alternate sequence at a particular locus
locus/gene:
particular position or location on a chromosome
mitochondrial DNA
small circular DNA is resistant to damage
haplotype
combination of alleles on the same chromosome that tend to be inherited as a group
segregation and independent assortment
alleles segregate into separate gametes and sort independently of other alleles
recombination
information transfer between the chromosomes
how many chromosome pairs does a human have?
23 pairs
how many autosomes does a human have
22 pairs, 44 autosomes
what is the goal for mitosis
to make two genetically identical daughter cells (2N --> 2N)
what is the goal for meiosis
to make haploid gametes.
sexual reproduction.
germ cells specialized for reproduction.
have only one copy of the genome
2N--> N
homologous chromosomes
have the same genes at the same loci but could have different alleles
sister chromatids
one half of the duplicated chromosome
tetrad
4 chromatids that come in contact with another: two NON- sister chromatids recombine and "switch places"
pseudoautosomal region:
sequence similarity at the telomeres that allows for them to recognize one another during meiosis
barr bodies:
inactive X chromosome in a female somatic cell
How many barr bodies does a normal male have?
0
how many barr bodies would you expect to see in a normal female?
2
Turner's syndrome
female has a missing x chromosome
0 barr bodies
poor breast development, under-developed ovaries
What is klinefelter's syndrome
a male has an extra X chromosome
1 barr body
under developed testes
breast development
Translocations
movement of genetic material between non homologous chromosomes
difference between this and crossing over is crossing over is necessary for recombining alleles, translocation is a MUTATION
reciprocal translocations
equal exchange between genetic material
nonrepicprocal translocations:
"i give you something but you don't give me anything back"
unequal exchange between genetic material
robertsonian translocations:
break points associated with centromere and fusing of q arms of non homologous chromosomes
chromosome inversions
order of alleles changes (linkage group changes)
LIKE FLIPPING IT
cohesins
responsible for keeping the sister chromatids together
uniparental disomy
when a person receives two copies of a chromosome from one parent and no copies from the other parent
ex. Prader Willi and Angleman
penetrance
percentage of individuals with a particular genotype that express the expected phenotype
incomplete penetrance
genotype does not produce the expected phenotype
expressivity
degree to which a character is expressed
proband
a person serving as the starting point for the genetic study of a family
dominant mode of inheritance
affected child must have at least one affected parent
recessive mode of inheritance
affected child does not have to have affected parent
mitochondrial mode of inheritance
passed from mother to all her children
y-linked mode of inheritance
passed from father to all his sons
autosomal mode of inheritance
equal genders are affected
x-linked mode of inheritance
unequal genders are affected
hemizygous
only one copy of a chromosome is present
[copy of gene is deleted]
all genes on X chromosome of a male are hemizgyous
twin studies:
examine the concordance of a trait between members of a twin pair
heritability
genetic variance divided by phenotypic variance
estimate the proportion of the phenotypic variation in a population due to genetic differences
concordance
presence of the same trait in both members of a pair of twins
tumor supressor gene
inhibits the cell cycle from progressing
2 hits
proto-oncogenes
promotes the cell cycle from progression
oncogene:
gene that under certain circumstances will transform from a cell into a tumor cell
genomic integrity gene
normally functions in DNA damage repair
retinoblastoma
cancer of the retina
what are the tumor supressor genes?
p53 and RB1
what is the function of the p53 gene
important in apoptosis
what is the function of the RB1 gene
functions at the G1 to S checkpoint,
halters cell growth
Li Fraumeni Syndrome
germline mutations in p53
Half of the p53 will be functional half be not be functional
Spontaneous cancers
requires two independent mutations
hereditary cancers
germline mutation in a tumor supressor gene > inherited and affects all cells
requires a second mutation
Human papillomavirus (HPV)
-can cause cancer (cervical, vuluar, vaginal, penile, and anal)
-type of strain determines whether you get warts or cancer
-it is transmitted through skin contact (sexually)
helicobacter pylori
bacteria responsible for causing ulcers
causes general inflammatory stress
passenger mutation
found within cancer genomes
not contributed to cancer development
driver mutations
casually implicated in oncogenesis
growth advantage on the cancer cell
genetic linkage
when genes are located close to each other on the same chromosome and crossing-over during meiosis is needed to generate different allele combinations
recombination frequency
tells us how far apart two loci are on a chromosome
what is the equation for recombination frequency
# of recombinants
-----------------------
total offspring
what does recombination frequency also provide us with
genetic distance measured in centiMorgans or mapunits
Genome wide Association Studies (GWAS)
way to scan the entire genome for mutations
uncover differences between patients and controls
recombinant DNA
DNA that has formed artificially from such thing as cloning
Gene Therapy
correction of genetic disease by transfer of normal version of the gene into patient's somatic cells
dideoxy/sanger sequencing
has dNTPs and colored ddNTPs to determine the identity/ order of the bases in a DNA molecule
read bottom to top (smallest to largest)
only one primer
Next generation sequecing
determines the bases in a DNA molecule by using synthesis
RNA sequencing:
(aka shotgun sequencing)
uses next-generation sequencing (NGS) to reveal the presence and quantity of RNA in a biological sample at a given moment in time. RNA-Seq is used to analyze the continually changing cellular transcriptome
transcriptome: the sum total of all the messenger RNA molecules expressed from the genes of an organism
Exome sequencing:
sequencing all expressed genes in a genome(aka all the genes in the exome which is all the exons since introns are removed) [you can focus only on protein coding regions]
What three general characteristics must the genetic material possess?
capacity for change (mutation)
storage for a lot of information(code for all traits)
chemical/genetic stability(faithful copies)
What are the pyrimidines?
cytosine and Thymine
what are the purines?
adenine and guanine
how many rings do pyrimidines have?
1
how many rings do purines have?
2
what do hyrdrogen bonds link?
nitrogenous bases
what do covalent bonds link?
nucleotides to nucleotides
how many hydrogen bonds does A&T have
2
how many hydrogen bonds does G&C have
3
when does replication occur?
S phase
Denaturation
heating up to break the hydrogen bonds
annealing
cooling down so the primers can be added
elongation
heating back up so taq polymerase can be recruited and add nucleotide bases
when does transcription occur?
all throughout interphase
what is another name for a transcription unit?
a gene
2 ways the structure of an RNA molecule differs from a DNA molecule
ribose vs deoxyribose
single stranded vs double stranded
is the promotor incorporated into the mRNA transcript?
no
is the sequencing primer incorporated into the synthesized fragment?
yes
what modifications would the mRNA strand need for transcription to occur?
5'cap (recruit ribosome for translation)
remove introns
3 poly a tail (stability)
what does TBP stand for
TATA binding protein
What are the two categories for the molecular change mutation?
point mutation/base substitution
insertion/deletion
what are the classes of point mutation/base substitution
transition or transversion
what occurs in a transition
a purine changes for another purine
a pyrimidine changes for another pyrimidine
what occurs in a transversion
a purine changes for a pyrimidine and vice versa
what is a missense point mutation
change in the entire amino acid
what is a nonsense point mutation
a premature stop occurs
what is a silent point mutation
there is no change in the amino acid
what happens when there is an insertion/deletion of a multiple of 3
an amino acid gets either inserted or deleted