Module 5 - Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Centimorgan (cM)

A
  • is a unit of genetic measurement
  • doesn’t calculate actual distance
  • RF of 1% = 1 cM
  • the larger the cM, the greater the distance between two genes
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2
Q

What does recombinant frequency tell us

A

It tells us:
- whether two genes are linked (RF less 0.5)
- whether two genes are independently assorted (RF = 0.5)

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3
Q

Genetic Linkage Analysis

A

A statistical method used in genetics to identify the chromosomal regions/genes that co-segregate with disease phenotypes

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4
Q

Haplotype (haploid + genotype)

A

The alleles present on a single chromosome from one parent; are inherited together

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5
Q

Genotype

A

The genetic makeup of an organism considering both pairs of chromosomes

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6
Q

DNA Polymorphism

A

alternative forms of a genomic locus that differ in nucleotide seq or length

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7
Q

SNP

A

single nucleotide polymorphism

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8
Q

SSR

A

single sequence repeat (20-30 repeats)

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9
Q

VNTR

A

variable number of tandem repeats (several hundred repeats)

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10
Q

RFLP

A

restriction fragment length polymorphism (review slide)

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11
Q

Polymorphisms are ___________ that can be used to narrow down the location of disease alleles

A

DNA Markers - a DNA seq. of known location on a chromosome
- to identify disease alleles can use: genetic mapping or seq the linked locus
- pedigree must be large enough to see recombinants

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12
Q

Limitations of Linkage Analysis (4)

A
  • size of pedigree analyzed
  • presence of multiple mutant alleles
  • mutations in different genes that cause the same disease
  • not possible for multifactorial or complex traits
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13
Q

Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS)

A
  • looks for genetic associations between SNPs & traits by looking at SNPs across the whole genome in a large pop.
  • ex. Manhatten plot
  • dots above threshold = linked to trait (significant p value)
  • dot = SNP, x-axis = genomic location, y-axis = association level (linkage)
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14
Q

GWAS - how is it done

A
  1. obtain SNP profiles for each member of the test pop. (1,000-10,000) expressing the phenotype
  2. if case-control, control to control pop. (?)
  3. identify SNPs associated with differences in individuals that have the trait/disease
  4. determine whether there are any association between SNPs on the same haplotype (“narrow down” responsive genes)
  5. identify regions of the genome that influence trait expression
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15
Q

What type of disease is breast cancer?
What are the 4 main types?

A
  • It is a heterogenous disease
  • 4 main types classified based on the protein markers found on outside of the cell
    1. H&E
    2. ER
    3. PR
    4. HER2
    (triple - is the most severe as there is no targeted treatment: ER-/PR-/HER2-)
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16
Q

Chemotherapy

A

Targets fast dividing cells (ie. cancer cells but also hair/GI cells)

17
Q

Prognostic value

A

Patient with hormone receptor-positive tumours have better survival rates than those who have HR-negative tumours

18
Q

Personalized medicine

A

A treatment plan is created based on the profile of molecular markers in the pt’s tumour
- fewer side effects & less damage to surrounding tissue
- targeted therapeutics (binds to estrogen receptors)

19
Q

Dr.Juliet Daniel Lab Research Q

A

Do black women have a SNP (or SNPs) that increases their risk for aggressive and highly fatal treat cancer subtypes?