Multifactorial Inheritance/ Epigenetics Flashcards
1
Q
- MF inheritance def?
- What plays a role?
- Ex? (9)
- Experiments looking at this?
A
- Relatives have increased risk but no consistent pattern of inheritance
- Multiple genes and environment play a role
- T1D, T2D, Alzheimers, IBD, Schizophrenia, Cleft Lip, Hypertension, Arthritis, Asthma
- Twins, Adoptions, Immigration
2
Q
- Characteristics of complex trait? (4)
- Heritiability def? Increased heritability means? Ex:
A
- incomplete penetrance, variable expressivity, allelic and genetic heterogeneity, phenocopies (people have disease for reasons not necessarily genetic)
- Proportion of disease variation due to genetics trait; difference largely due to genes. Example: looking at how much genes play a role in height of a population
3
Q
- Charatacteristics of epigenetics? (4)
- Analogies used to explain this? (2)
- Best example of epigenetics?
- 4 other examples?
A
- Different expression from same genome, inheritance through cell division (feast vs. famine example), on/off switch, erasable which is important b/c gene therapy is so tough
- Waddington’s boulder, lights board
- Stem cells –> different adult cells
- demethylation, methylation, maintenece methyl transferase after somatic cell division, packaing DNA into chromatin
4
Q
- H3 modification that occurs?
- Inheritance state of H3?
- Non-nuclear epigenetics with cancer?
- Silencing with tumor supressor gene? Possible treatment?
A
- Repress = methylation; activate = acetylation
- H3 modified post replication
- Switch involving NfKb
- With age, TSG is methylated and eventually silenced; lung cancers myeloid neoplams treated with DNA methyl transferase and deacetyl transferase inhibition to turn on TSG