Lecture--Chapter 8 Flashcards

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1
Q

one that uses a light microscope to study the structure and number of chromosomes

A

cytogeneticist

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2
Q

Different species can be distinguished from each other based on:

A

chromosome number, size, and staining

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3
Q

size, position of centromere, banding pattern from stains for:

A

chromosome classification

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4
Q

position of centromere:

A

short arm: p; long arm: q

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5
Q

the number and appearance of chromosomes in the nucleus

A

karyotype

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6
Q

Chromosome classification: banding:

A

light and dark patterns can be enhanced by stains

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7
Q

G bands

A

Geimsa stain; best with prometaphase chromosomes

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8
Q

can be changed by mutation

A

chromosome structure

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9
Q

change in total genetic information:

A
  1. deletions

2. duplications

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10
Q

loss of a chromosomal segment

A

deletions

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11
Q

repetition of a chromosomal segment compared to the normal parent chromosome

A

duplications

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12
Q

Chromosome structure: genetic material/information rearranged:

A
  1. inversions

2. translocations

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13
Q

a change in the direction of part of the genetic material along a single chromosome

A

inversions

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14
Q

segment of one chromosome becomes attached to a non-homologous chromosome

A

translocations

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15
Q

generally associated with a strand break

A

deletions

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16
Q

Phenotypic consequences of deficiencies depends on:

A

the size and nature of the deletion

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17
Q

Autosomal deletions generally cause:

A

growth failure, mental retardation, and multiple malformations

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18
Q

associated with errors during recombination

A

duplications

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19
Q

_____ at misaligned sites with repetitive sequences

A

unequal crossing over

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20
Q

duplications often have:

A

no phenotypic effect

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21
Q

relatively few human syndromes are cause by:

A

small chromosomal duplications; Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease

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22
Q

duplications produce:

A

additional gene copies

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23
Q

The copied genes may accumulate mutations which alter their function: leading to:

A

formation of a gene family

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24
Q

two or more genes derived from a common ancestor

A

homologs

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25
Q

homologous genes within a single species that form a gene family

A

paralogs

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26
Q

oxygen binding paralogs of myoglobin and hemoglobin

A

human globin genes

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27
Q

occur from 2 breaks in a single chromosome with inaccurate repair

A

inversions

28
Q

inversions are classified according to:

A

location of centromere

29
Q

most inversions have:

A

no phenotypic consequences

30
Q

result from breaks in two non-homologous chromosomes with inaccurate repair

A

translocations

31
Q

balanced, no gene loss

A

reciprocal translocation

32
Q

unbalanced, often lethal

A

simple translocation

33
Q

repeat DNA sequences at end of chromosomes

A

telomeres

34
Q

the participating chromosomes break at their centromeres

A

Robertsonian translocation

35
Q

Robertsonian translocation occurs on the 5 ___ chromosomes

A

acrocentric (13, 14, 15, 21, 22)

36
Q

Robertsonian translocation: long arms ___ and short arms ___

A

fuse together

37
Q

Robertsonian translocation arm fusions can result in ____ in offspring

A

Down syndrome (trisomy 21)

38
Q

commonly caused by non-disjunction

A

Down syndrome

39
Q

failure of chromosomes to segregate properly

A

non-disjunction

40
Q

variation in the number of 1 or more chromosomes within a set; often causes birth defects

A

aneuploidy

41
Q

variation in the number of complete sets of chromosomes; common in plants, can be beneficial

A

euploidy

42
Q

results from chromosomes not separating properly during cell division

A

aneuploidy

43
Q

~ 5 - 10% of embryos have an abnormal chromosome number (non-disjunction); causes ~50% of spontaneous abortions

A

meiotic error

44
Q

sex chromosome aneuploidies generally have ____

A

less severe effects

45
Q

results from cytokinesis occurring before nuclear division is complete

A

euploidy

46
Q

___ is uncommon in animals and usually deleterious

A

euploidy

47
Q

some diploid and ____ amphibians and reptiles

A

polyploid

48
Q

some ___ insects

A

haplodiploid

49
Q

some ____ cells or tissues; mammalian liver cells, insect salivary gland cells

A

endopolyploid

50
Q

insect salivary gland cells

A

polytene chromosomes

51
Q

Euploidy is more common in ____

A

plants; 30-35% of ferns and flowering plants are polyploid

52
Q

genome duplications associated with

A

rapid speciation

53
Q

Polyploid strains of plants display improved

A

agricultural characteristics; larger size, more robust, improved disease resistance; triploid species sterile, but often useful (bananas, watermelons)

54
Q

3 natural mechanisms by which the chromosome number of a species can vary:

A
  1. meiotic nondisjunction
  2. mitotic nondisjunction
  3. interspecies crosses: alloploids
55
Q

chromosomes do not separate properly

A

meiotic nondisjunction

56
Q

occurs in either meiosis I or meiosis II

A

meiotic nondisjunction

57
Q

can produce aneuploidy or polyploidy

A

meiotic nondisjunction

58
Q

2 or more populations of cells that have different genotypes in an individual that came from 1 fertilised egg

A

mosaic

59
Q

occurs after fertilisation

A

mitotic nondisjunction

60
Q

usually only a subset of cells are affected, mosaic

A

mitotic nondisjunction

61
Q

chromosomes from 2 species

A

alloploids

62
Q

usually closely related plant species

A

interspecies crosses

63
Q

more fertile

A

allotetraploids

64
Q

experimental treatments can produce ___ plants

A

autopolyploid

65
Q

experimental treatments can lead to

A

abrupt temperature changes

66
Q

a chemical that binds to tubulin of the spindle apparatus

A

colchicine