imprinting (6) Flashcards
define imprinting
differential modification of the maternal & paternal genetic contributions to the zygot resulting in the differential expression of parental alleles during development and in the adult
what are 2 examples of DNA methylation
X inactivation
imprinting
tell me about meiotic imprinting
although it is acceptable for somatic cells to be a mosaic female & male imprinted chromosome, it is essential that the single correct imprint (male OR female) be transmitted to the offspring
–so it is known that one of the functions of meiosis is to “reimprint” all of the chromosomes that will end up in gametes
what is an imprinting failure that can occur in meiosis
some chromosomes for a male could retain the female methylation pattern causing the offspring to have 1 chromosome from each parent, but both the chromosomes will have female imprinting
what is uniparental disomy?
inheritance of a chromosome of chromosomes form 1 parent to the exclusion of the other parent.
what type of technology is used to determine if a UPD is present?
NOT karyotype
molecular probe technology can be used
what is uniparental heterodisomy? how does it occur?
- 2 diff chromosomes form the same parent
- If the cell has trisomy which is not compatible with life- it can be corrected by “loosing” one of the chromosomes and 1/3 of the time the chromosome lost is the only 1 from the other parent and the two left are from the same parent
what is uniparental isodisomy? how does it happen?
duplication of 1 chromosome from 1 parent
-The cell senses that there has been a problem (ie. A deletion/nondisjunction) and the cell then duplicates the monosome (the only chromosome) that it has- this is called “zygote rescue”
what chromosome is the problem with prander willi & angelman syndromes?
proximal long arm of chromosome 15
what chromosome is NOT present in PWS?
15 from dad
what chromosome is NOT present in AS?
15 from mom
what disease does the following describe:
“Patients are small & hypotonic at birth but change within 1st year of life and begin to gain weight rapidly. It not placed on controlled diet can become obese”
prader wili syndrome
describe some symptoms of AS
- Most common mutation is in the UBE3A gene?
- Severely mentally retarded, friendly but normally cannot carry on conversations and often have bursts of laughter
- Hyperactivity, short stature, microcephaly, seizures and ataxia
is cytogenetics better for detecting AS or PWS?
PWS detected in 60-65%
only 10-20% of AS cases
in paternal imprinting, what genes are active/inactive?
UBE3A
SNRPN
necdin
UBE3A: inactive
SNRPN: active
necdin: active: