Gene Interaction II Flashcards

1
Q

How much DNA do mitochondria contain?

A

16.5 kb chromosomes

Most cells have more than 1000 mtDNA molecules and mature oocytes have more than 100k copies of mtDNA

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2
Q

How many genes do mitochondria have and what do they consist of?

A

37 genes:

13 encode polypeptides

2 rRNAs

22 tRNAs

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3
Q

What kind of changes in mtDNA can result in human disease?

A

Different rearrangements and point mutations.

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4
Q

How are mitochondrial diseases inherited?

A

They have distinctive patterns of inheritance due to 3 unusual features of mitochondria:

Replicative segregation

Homoplasmy and heteroplasmy

Maternal inheritance

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5
Q

What is replicative segregation?

A

Mitochondria copy their genome and then it goes anywhere randomly segregating into new cells.

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6
Q

What is homoplasmy?

A

All mitochondria have same genome in the cell

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7
Q

What is heteroplasmy?

A

Different mitochondria within the cell.

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8
Q

Are all mitochondria maternally inherited?

A

There are exceptions but this is generally the case. (sometimes paternal mitochondria enters egg and somehow the mtDNA gets expressed)

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9
Q

How does replicative segregation contribute to disease?

A

Mutant mitochondria can clonally expand and pass a threshold for phenotypic expression.

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10
Q

If a mother has a mitochondrial trait and one of her children doesn’t express the trait what are possible causes of this?

A

Incomplete penetrance

Variable expressivity

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11
Q

What is incomplete penetrance?

A

Proportion of individuals with a mutation that develop the phenotype.(Fully penetrant diseases are expressed in 100% of the case like huntington’s)

Number of people with the disease/number of people with the mutation

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12
Q

What is variable expressivity?

A

The degree to which a phenotype is expressed.

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13
Q

What affects expressivity of a gene?

A

Thought to be affected by additional genetic and environmental factors.

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14
Q

What is an epistasis?

A

Form of interaction between nonallelic genes in which one combination of such genes has a dominant effect over other combinations.

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15
Q

Which gene is considered the epistatic gene in epistasis?

A

Gene that does the masking

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16
Q

Which gene is considered the hypostatic gene in epistasis?

A

Gene being masked

17
Q

What substrate are the ABO sugars added to? How are they added?

A

substrate H which is added by fucosyl transferases A or B encoded I^A abd I^B

18
Q

What substrate are the ABO sugars added to? How are they added?

A

Substrate H which is added by fucosyl transferase to I^A and I^B which encode A and B sugars.

19
Q

What results from the hh genotype?

A

The bombay phenotype which means O antigen is produced regardless of ABO locus. (ABO locus is hypostatic to the H locus)