lecture 25 - function of individual genes Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 key functional molecular genetic techniques?

A

Genetic screen, transgenesis/genetic engineering, target mutation

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2
Q

What is a genetic screen?

A

A method to increase the rate of random mutation, select for a phenotype of interest and sequence the genome to identify the mutation

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3
Q

What is trans genesis/genetic engineering?

A

Taking a gene of interest, copying it and inserting it into another organism

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4
Q

What is target mutation?

A

Deliberately breaking a particular gene to see what the effect is in the phenotype.

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5
Q

What are model organisms, in terms of genetic research?

A

Organisms that can be easily raised and genetically manipulated to study genetics.

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6
Q

What is the process of transgenesis?

A

Add foreign DNA to a zygote nucleus by inserting a trans gene (target gene + regulatory sequence)

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7
Q

What is a transgene?

A

A sequence of a target gene + a regulatory sequence that is inserted during transgenesis.

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8
Q

What is CRISPR-Cas9?

A

A technology that enables the removal, addition or altering of a genome

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9
Q

What does CRISPR stand for?

A

Clustered Regulatory Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats

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10
Q

What is Cas9?

A

CRISPR associated protein 9

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11
Q

What is the structure and function of Cas9?

A

It is a protein that has active sites that can cut DNA to bind a particular target gene.

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12
Q

How is a Cas9-guide RNA complex formed?

A

When guide RNA with a sequence complementary to the Cas9 bind to the active site of a Cas9 protein

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13
Q

What is the function of Cas9-guide RNA complexes?

A

They are added to the nuclei of cells of interest where they find, bind to and remove target sequences of DNA.

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14
Q

What occurs to the DNA when the Cas9-guide RNA complex has removed the target gene?

A

DNA repair enzymes will try to patch up the cut section, but there will usually be errors, e.g. InDels or mutations. Thus a new sequence can be created.

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15
Q

What is somatic gene therapy?

A

A therapy that targets affected somatic cells/organs and delivers functional copies of faulty genes or removes parts of faulty genes to restore function.

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16
Q

What is germline modification/selection?

A

Altering, selecting or testing DNA before an embryo is implanted to determine the genetic characteristics of the offspring.

17
Q

What are the 3 key modern processes used for germline modification/selection?

A

Pre-implantation genetic testing, ‘3 parent’ babies, CRISPR gene editing

18
Q

What is a ‘3 parent baby’

A

Baby that has the nucleic info from the mother implanted into another woman’s egg cell so that different mitochondrial DNA can be used.