Study Unit 3 Flashcards
Define polyploidy
The condition in which a normally diploid cell or organism acquires one or more additional sets of chromosome.
Example: triploidy = one extra 3n=69XXY
Tetraploidy= two extra sets 4=92XXXX
Define Aneuploidy
- Addition or loss of one chromosome
Example: trisomy, 47XY+21
Monosomy 45X
Define Mixoploidy
An organism having different numbers of chromosomes in different cells
Define Euploidy
Complete set of chromosome, no gain, no loss 2n=46
Origin of triploidy
1, dispermy (most common) two sperm fertilising a single egg.
2. Diploid gametes: diploid sperm or ovum
Meiotic non-disjunction
Process in which paired chromosome fail to separate during meiotic anaphase 1 and migrate to the same daughter cell, or sister chromatids fail to disjoin at either meiosis 2 or mitosis.
What causes tetraploidy (polyploidy)
This happens when a normal zygote that undergo normal DNA duplication but no cell division (endomitosis)
non-disjunction during meiosis results in.
- Results in Gametes with 22 or 24 chromosome resulting in a trisomic or monosomic zygote.
Results of non disjunction during mitosis.
Results in autosomal cells that are mosaic mix of normal and aneuploid cells.
What is the anaphase lag
Chromosome or chromatid delayed in movement during anaphase-lags behind-may fail to incorporate into daughter cell nucleus.
Mosaic vs chimera
Mosaic: results from two or more genetically different cell lineage as a result of mitotic non-disjunction.
Chimera: is a result of fusing of two genetically distinct fertilised eggs.
Explain balanced structural chromosomal abnormalities
- No change in amount of genetic material
- Cause by inversion and translocation
Explain unbalanced structural chromosomal abnormalities
- Gain or loss of essential chromosome segments
- Caused by deletions, duplication, insertions and rings and isochromosomes
Explain what an inversion is and what two types of inventions do you get.
- Inversion: rearrangement in which an internal segment of a chromosome has been broken twice, flipped 180 degrees and re-joined.
- Paracentric inversion: 2 breaks in same arm
- Peri centric inversion: breaks in different arms
What can happen after incorrect repair of two breaks on a single chromosome.
1.interstitial deletions
2. Paracentric inversion
3. Peri centric inversion
4. Ring chromosome
What the centromere dictates about propagation of structurally abnormal chromosome.
structurally abnormal chromosome with a single centromere can be stably propagated through successive rounds of mitosis. However, any repaired chromosome that lacks a centromere or posses two centromeres will normally not segregate stably at mitosis, and will eventually be lost.
Explain 4 isochromosome
- This is the loss of one arm with duplication of the other.
- Either p OR q arm lost a possible explanation centromere divided transversely.
- The most common isochromosome is when the two long arms of X-chromosome
Loss of function and gain of function in recessive disorder.
- Mutant allele in recessive disorders cannot be a gain of function.
- Loss of function + normal allele= normal phenotype.
- Loss of function + loss of function = Disease phenotype
When can loss of function mutation in the heterozygote state be dominant.
When there are haplo-insufficiency: 50% of normal function not sufficient for normal genotype.
Or
Imprinting gene : in certain allele sets, only one allele is transcribed the other parental allele is being silence.
Or
Dominant-negative mutation in genes that transcribe parts of A dimer or multimers.
Explain Loss-of-function in a dominant disorder in dosage sensitive genes.
- Dosage sensitive genes: the amount of product that is made is critically important . Often these products have roles in quantitative signaling system or other situations in which precisely defined ratios of the products of different genes are important for them to work together effectively.
Explain how dominant-negative mutation causes autosomal dominant disorders.
This is when the product of the mutant allele results in a mutant protein that cannot perform the function of the normal protein and also inhibit the function of wild-type protein produced by the normal allele. Common in proteins which are dimers or multimers.