BGM1004/L15 Genome Evolution Flashcards
How well is gene order on chromosomes conserved?
Very highly over wide evolutionary distances
How are sentencing genes grouped on chromosomes of different species?
Grouped in the same way
What are synteny blocks?
Regions containing homologous genes
How can chromosomal rearrangements be identified?
By looking for blocks of synteny between chromosomes of different organisms
What is reciprocal translocation?
Where 2 non-homologous chromosomes break and exchange fragments
What can result from meiosis after translocation?
Trisomy
What is centric fusion?
2 telocentric chromosomes fuse to generate one new chromosome
What is Robertsonian translocation?
Short arms of two acrocentric chromosomes lost
What can result from Robertsonian translocation after meiosis?
Trisomy or Monopsony
Give the 2 types of inversion.
Paracentric (one arm)
Pericentric (two arms or around centromere)
What can increase the complexity of the genome? (2)
Small scale gene duplications
Large scale gene/genome duplications followed by loss of superfluous genes and divergence of retained homologues
What leads to unequal crossover?
Repetitive region of one chromatid does not line up with corresponding region in others
Different repeat numbers result
What is sister chromatid exchange?
Strands breaking on sister chromatids producing different repeat numbers
Give an example of an organism that has undergone a relatively recent genome duplication.
Saccharomyces cerevisae
Why is genome duplication evolutionary advantageous?
‘Extra set’ does not have the same restriction on mutation rate as a single copy (selective pressure to retain function)