13. Eukaryotic Chromosome and Gene Structure Flashcards
Nucleosome
DNA is wrapped around a nucleosome core (octomer or histones) (Genes available)
Solenoid
Nucleosomes folded into a spiral structure (Genes unavailable)
Constitutive Heterochromatin
Portions of the genome that are always found in heterochromatin; includes centromeres and telomeres
Facultative Heterochromatin
Portions of the genome made heterochromatic for regulatory or developmental reasons; e.g. Barr bodies
Telomere Replication
Uses telomerase, which has a built-in RNA template and decreases in activity as one ages, which shortens the telomeres
Gene Families
Related genes that are located near each other on a chromosome
Pseudogenes
Regions that look like that they should be genes; no functional end product; often lack promoters or are transcribed and not translated; can be processed (full mRNA is retrotransposed back into genome) or nonprocessed (duplications and mutations render gene nonfunctional); termed evolutionary detritus
Replicative Transposons
Transposons replicate themselves in the genome; yeast mating example
Nonreplicative Transposons
Transposons leave donor DNA with a double-stranded break and then insert themselves into a new place; damaging to genome and sometimes found among viruses
Conservative Transposons
Transposons move from one place to another with full conservation of DNA at both sites
Satellites
Highly repetitive sequences found in heterochromatic areas; unknown function but thought to be related to centromere construction
Multiple Copy Genes
Moderately repetitive sequences that are copied numerous times in a chromosomes
Mini-Satellites
Short sequences (15-100 bases) with tandem repeats
Micro-Satellites
Smaller sequences (<15 bases) of tandem repeats; tendency to see a lot of CA repeats
SINES
Short Interspersed Elements; less than 500 bases and repeated hundreds of thousands of times; composes about 11% of human genome (e.g. Alu family)