Week 3 concepts and definitions Flashcards

1
Q

What is mosaicism?

A

The presence of 2 or more genotypes in an individual derived from one zygote

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2
Q

What is the difference between mosaicism and chimerism?

A

Chimerism is two genotypes present in one individual (usually the result of the fusion of two zygotes), while mosaicism is one genome present in the individual (usually the result of a mitotic error during development)

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3
Q

What is the difference between somatic and germline mosaicism?

A

Germline mosaicism is confined to the germ cells, while somatic mosaicism can occur in any cell except for germ cells

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4
Q

What is genomic imprinting?

A

A parent-of-origin difference in gene expression due to epigenetic modification

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5
Q

What is uniparental disomy (UPD)?

A

Both members of a chromosome pair (or part of a chromosome) are inherited from one parent, usually due to trisomy with a loss of one of the extra chromosome around fertilization

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6
Q

What are the genetic mechanisms of imprinting disorders?

A

Deletion of gene on the appropriate parent, uniparental disomy of the opposite parent, imprinting defect that silences the gene on the appropriate parent

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7
Q

What is anticipation in the context of trinucleotide repeat disorders?

A

The tendency of an increase in the number of trinucleotide repeats in subsequent generations

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8
Q

What factors affect the pathogenicity of a repeat expansion?

A

Sequence/size of repeat, location of repeat within gene, whether repeat encodes RNA or protein, function of affected gene

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9
Q

What is heteroplasmy?

A

The presence of both normal and mutant mitochondria

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10
Q

How are mitochondrial diseases inherited?

A

Maternally inherited; both males and females can be affected, but individuals can only inherit the disease from their mother

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11
Q

What is a teratogen?

A

A drug or other agent that causes abnormal development in the embryo or fetus; an exposure in pregnancy that has a harmful fetal effect

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12
Q

What is teratology?

A

The study of environmentally induced congenital anomalies

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13
Q

What factors affect the teratogenicity of an agent?

A

Timing, dose (amount/frequency/duration), fetal and maternal metabolism, genetic susceptibility

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14
Q

When is the growing individual most sensitive to teratogens?

A

During organogenesis (weeks 2-9, first trimester)

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15
Q

In general, what abnormalities arise during each trimester of pregnancy?

A

First trimester - congenital malformation; second and third trimester - IQ

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