Chapter 12 Flashcards

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1
Q

what are sequence homology searches?

> on which levels?

A

when finding a new gene

> function of identified gene may be unknown

> but it could be evolutionarily relatd to another gene with a defined function

> sequence comparisons on either DNA level or protein level

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2
Q

how to make knock out mice?

A
  1. use embryonic stem (ES) cells
  2. switch of your gene
  3. inject your ES cell into mouse embryo

> chimera mouse with mixed cells

  1. mate chimeric mice
  2. some offspring will be homozygote of your cell!

tada

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3
Q

what are the 3 functional levels gene products can be analyzed on?

A
  1. biochemical level: e.g. gene product is calcium-binding protein
  2. cellular levels: e.g. protein is in ucleus and required for DNA repair
  3. organism level: when/when is the gene expressed in the organism
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4
Q

on which 2 levels can sequence homology searches be conducted?

> which one preferred?

A
  1. transcriptional
  2. proteomics

> proteomics preferred, more confident because more conserved

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5
Q

what are orthologs?

what are paralogs?

A

orthologs: assumed to perform identical or closely related functions
paralogs: functional predictions may be reliable on biochemical level, but cellular/organism level functions may be different

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6
Q

what are two broad ways to study gene function?

A
  1. forward genetic (classical)

> phenotype -> genotype

  1. reverse genetics

> genotype -> phenotype

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