Non-Mendelian Inheritance (Genetic Basis of Complex Inheritance) Flashcards
What are the three laws of Mendelian Inheritance?
The Law of Dominance.The Law of Segregation.The Law of Independent Assortment.
What is Non-mendelian Inheritance?
Does not fit in with Mendelian’s Lawe.g.Gene conversion. Intermediate phenotypeGenetic material from only one parent?
What is the mechanism for the following Inheritance patterns : Incomplete PenetranceGenomic ImprintingExtranuclear InheritanceAnticipation
Environmental factorGenetic Modifiers Variants from parentse.g. Mitochondria mutationse.g. Triplet repeat expansion
What is penetrance?
Penetrance is the frequency with which a trait is manifested by individuals carrying the gene.Compares risk of the same disease between different mutations
What else apart from the CTFR mutation is responsible for the severity of CF in organs?
Genetic modifiers : Genes that have small quantitative effects on the level of expression of another gene.May involve polymorphism.Environment factors:Lifestyle, Diet, Smoke, Alcohol, Drug,Stress, Air pollution, Chemicals,Infection, etc.
What are the effects of CF?
SinusitisLungs - Sticky mucus build up, bacterial infection and widened airwaysSkin - sweat glands produce salty sweatLiver - blocked biliary ductsPancreas - Blocked pancreatic ductsIntestines - Cannot fully absorb nutrientsReproductive organs - complications
What is responsible for the rapid increase in prevalence of diabetes in the pacific region
Not merely genetic factors obesity, unhealthy diets, and physical inactivity are also responsible
What is genomic imprinting?
When genes are altered / shut off during the production of gametes
What is Bi-allelic?
Same allele is turned on in both chromosomes from each parent?
What is mono-allelic?
Gene is only turned on from one of the parents chromosomes
What is the expression of genetic disease like in imprinted DNA?
Higher because there is only only copy of the gene
What are Epigenetic modifications?
Heritable changes in gene function that cannot be explained by changes in DNA sequences
What is Uniparental disomy?
Inheritance of a chromosome pair from one parental origin, because genes can be turned off there is a high risk of genetic mutation?
What are the three sources of UPD?
Trisomy rescue, Monosomy rescue, Mitotic error (non-disjunction or Duplication)
What is the result of uniparental diploidy?
Gynogenic - 2 maternal genomes - Mass of embryo - Ovarian teratomaAndrogenic - 2 paternal genomes - Mass of placenta - Hydatidiform mole