Week 5 - topic 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Twin studies

A
  • Twin studies provide a powerful method for estimating the influence of heredity on particular traits
  • > Compare Monozygotic (identical) and Dizygotic (fraternal) twins
  • > Monozygotic twins have identical genotypes—that is, their chromosomes, and the genes they contain, are identical
  • > Dizygotic twins have a genetic similarity of around 50%
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2
Q

Twin studies and disorders

A
  • If both twins are diagnosed with same condition, they are concordant
  • If only one is diagnosed, they are discordant
  • If a disorder has a strong genetic basis, the percentage of monozygotic twins who are concordant for the diagnosis will be higher than that for dizygotic twins.
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3
Q

Adoption studies

A
  • All behavioural traits are affected to some degree by hereditary factors, environmental factors (physical, social and biological), and an interaction between these factors
  • Compare people adopted early in life with biological and adoptive family members
  • If people strongly resemble biological parents, trait is probably influenced by genetic factors
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4
Q

Chromoses, DNA and genes

A
  • Organisms have cells which contain chromosomes
  • Chromosomes consist of long strands of DNA which contain instructions for producing proteins, important for cellular functioning
  • Gene = functional unit of the chromosome, which directs synthesis of one or more proteins
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5
Q

Genomes and alleles

A
  • Genome = Complete set of genes that compose DNA of particular species
  • Mutations in genes occur over generations, so no two people have the same genetic information (apart from MZ twins)
  • Allele = the particular form of an individual gene
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6
Q

Genomic studies

A

Genomic studies attempt to determine the location in the genome of genes responsible for various physical and behavioural traits

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7
Q

Linkage studies

A
  • identify families whose members vary in a particular trait (e.g. presence/absence of Huntington’s Disease)
  • Markers = sequences of DNA whose locations are already known
  • Compare markers across members of the family
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8
Q

Genomewide association studies

A

compare all or portions of the genomes of different individuals to determine whether differences in the people’s genomes correlate with the presence or absence of diseases (or other traits)

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9
Q

Benefits of genome-wide association studies

A
  • Identify novel variant-trait associations (e.g. anorexia nervosa, major depressive disorder) which might have important clinical applications.
  • Lead to the discovery of novel biological mechanisms (e.g. GWAS discovered that autophagy (how cells degrade and recycle components) plays a role in Crohns’ disease).
  • GWAS data is easy to share and publicly available data allows for further discoveries and advancement
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10
Q

Limitations of genome-wide association studies

A
  • GWAS usually only estimate a modest amount of the heritability of a given trait meaning it can have limited clinical predictive value.
  • Correlation does not equal causation - GWAS do not necessarily pinpoint causal variants and genes
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