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What is a gene?
A heritable factor that consists of a length of DNA and influences a specific characteristic.
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What are traits?
Specific characteristics.
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What is a locus?
Is the specific position of the gene on the chromosome.
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What are alleles?
The different forms of a specific gene (that differ from one another by a few bases)
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What causes variation?
All individuals carry the same gene on the same loci of the same chromosome. Alleles that differ from one another by a few bases cause variation.
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What is gene mutation?
A random, rare change in the sequence of bases of the gene.
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What is base substitution mutation?
- Is the insertion of an incorrect nucleotide
- This either has no or major influences on the organism’s physical characteristics.
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What are the three types of mutations?
- Beneficial: increases survival rate, likely to be passed on
- Detrimental: decreases survival rate, unlikely to be passed on
- Neutral: does not influence the survival rate.
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What is gene therapy?
Taking a beneficial gene from someone who carries it and putting it into someone who does not have it (a virus may be used)
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What is a genome?
- The whole of the genetic information of an organism.
- Not the number of genes but the total amount of DNA
- (The number of genes is not proportional to the amount of DNA)
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What are the differences between the genetic information of prokaryotes and eukaryotes?
- Number: 1 in prokaryotes, 2 or more in eukaryotes.
- Shape: circular in prokaryotes and linear in eukaryotes
- Pairs: no in prokaryotes yes in eukaryotes
- Histones: no in prokaryotes (except for archaea) yes in eukaryotes
- Plasmid: sometimes in prokaryotes never in eukaryotes
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What is autoradiography?
- Radiation from a substance is captured from film or by sensors.
- John Cairns produced the first images from E. coli by the growth of a culture containing thymidine containing a radioactive isotope of H (thymine + pentose sugar)
- Through this, he found that
- E Coli DNA is circular
- Semi-conservative replication is supported
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What is a karyogram?
- Representation of the chromosomes found in the cell according to a standard format.
- (stained cells are photographed during mitotic metaphase)
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What is a karyotype?
A specific number and appearance of the chromosomes of a cell
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Outline the differences between the behaviour of chromosomes in mitosis and meiosis.
- 1 division in mitosis and 2 in meiosis
- Diploid cells produced in mitosis and haploid produced in meiosis
- No crossing over in prophase 1 in mitosis
- No chiasmata formation in mitosis
- Homologous pairs don’t line up in metaphase of mitosis
- Sister chromatids separate at anaphase 1 in mitosis
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Explain crossing over
- Alleles are exchanged between homologous chromosomes
- Homologous chromatids break at the same point, twist around each other and connect to the other’s initial location
- Happens during prophase 1
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What is chiasmata?
Spots where two homologous chromosomes going through crossing over connect to exchange genetic material.
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What is recombination?
Exchange of DNA to recombine and produce new combinations of alleles
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What is tetrad?
They form during prophase 1 through synapsis of homologous chromosomes
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What is random orientation?
Homologous chromosomes randomly line up in the center of the cell during metaphase 1 and metaphase 2, leading to variation.
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Meiosis: Interphase
- DNA replication
- Chromatin condenses into chromosomes (2 sister chromatids joined by the centromere)
- Further growth, organelle replication
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Meiosis: Prophase 1
- Homologous chromosomes go through synapsis to from tetrads.
- Nuclear membrane dissolves
- Crossing over occurs
- Centrioles migrate to opposite poles of the cell. Microtubule spindle attaches to each centromere of the chromosomes
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Meiosis: Metaphase 1
- Tetrads line up at the equator
- Random orientation of chromosomes leads to variation
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Meiosis: Anaphase 1
- Microtubule spindle contracts.
- Homologous chromosomes pairs are separated.
- Reduction division occurs. Chromosome number at each pole of the cell is halved.
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Meiosis: Telophase 1
- Cell elongates, cleavage furrow forms.
- Cytokinesis begins
- Nuclear envelope reappears
- Chromosomes uncoil
- Spindle begins to disintegrate
- MANY PLANTS DO NOT HAVE TELOPHASE 1
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Meiosis: Prophase 2
- Interphase or S phase does not occur before this.
- Nuclear membrane disintegrates
- Chromatin supercoils to form chromosomes
- Centrioles move to opposite poles (perpendicular to prophase 1)
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Meiosis: Metaphase 2:
- Chromosomes line up at the equator in random orientation
- Spindle attaches to centromeres
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Meiosis: Anaphase 2:
- Spindle contracts, splitting chromosomes into 2 sister chromatids.
- An equal number of chromosomes are pulled towards opposite poles.
- Random orientation of sister chromatids leads to further variation
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Meiosis: Telophase 2
- Nuclear envelope reappears
- Chromosomes uncoil
- Cell elongates as cleave furrow or cell plate forms
- Cytokinesis 2 begins
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What causes Down Syndrome?
Nondisjunction of the 21st chromosome during anaphase 1
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What causes genetic variation?
- Crossing over during prophase 1
- Random orientation during metaphase 1 and metaphase 2 (n over 2)
- Fertilization (allele combinations)
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Kleinefelter Syndrome
XXY
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What did Mendel do?
Observed the inheritance of single traits and deduced the law of genetics.
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What is codominance?
Pair of alleles which are both expressed when present (expressed as over a letter such as I or C, example being ABO blood type)
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What is genotype?
Combination of alleles.
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What is test cross?
Testing a dominant phenotype to determine if it’s homozygous or heterozygous by crossing it with homozygous recessive,
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What is pure breeding?
Individuals of the same phenotype, that we crossed, produce individuals of the same phenotype.
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What are some autosomal recessive genetic diseases?
- Albinism
- Cystic fibrosis
- Sickle cell
- Tay Sachs
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What are some X chromosome linked genetic diseases?
- Hemophilia
- Color blindness
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What is multiple alleles?
- 3 or more genes influence a trait
- (ABO)
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What are linked genes?
Two genes found on the same chromosome are linked genes
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What is a linkage group?
A group of genes inherited together
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What is mendel’s law of independent assortment?
The segregation of a pair of alleles between gametes is independent from the segregation of another unless they’re linked genes.
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What are the properties of unlinked genes?
- Independent assortment
- Not preferable over each other
- Equally distributed between gametes
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What is polygenic inheritance?
- Two or more genes influence the expression of a trait.
- Most common human traits are too complex to be influenced by one gene.
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What is distinct and continuous variation?
Polygenic traits show continuous variation.
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How to do chi squared test?
- (O-E)^2 divided by O
- Summed
- Degree of freedom - 1 is your critical value
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What did Thomas Hunt Morgan do?
- He worked with drosophila flies. He induced some mutations using chemicals and radiation and observed whether the mutations were inherited by doing cross breeding.
- He discovered that:
- 1)linked genes exist
- 2)Traits can be sex linked
- 3) crossing over occurs
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What are mutagens?
- Agents that cause mutations
- chemicals (carcinogens)
- Some viruses
- High energy radiation
- UV Light (breaks AT bond and bonds Ts together)
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What are oncogenes?
- Genes where a mutation leads to cancer through
- Lack of apoptosis
- Uncontrolled cell division due to abnormal cell cycle
- What is DNA Profiling?
- The process of matching an unknown sample of DNA with a known sample to see if they correspond.
- A sample of DNA is taken
- Sequences that vary significantly between individuals are selected and copied by PCR
- The sequence is determined through gel electrophoresis
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What is PCR?
- Polymerase chain reaction is used to get the sufficient amount of DNA to analyze
- A sequence is selected using a primer that binds to the start of the desired sequence
- The DNA is heated to 95 degrees, breaking the double helix apart
- At 55 degrees, primers anneal to the template strand
- At 72 degrees, Taq polymerase and extra nucleotides add complementary strands to the desired sequence selected by the primer
- Cycle is repeated 20-30 times to get desired amount of DNA
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What is gel electrophoresis?
- Restriction enzymes chop up the DNA into fragments
- DNA fragments are placed into wells
- The gel is exposed to electric current (positive at one side and negative at the other) as the negatively charged DNA moves to the positive side.
- The smaller and less charged particles move faster, showing bands in the gel.
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What is a hybridization probe?
A known sequence of complementary DNA that binds to a specific gene that can be used in gel electrophoresis to determine the presence of a specific gene.
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What are the applications of DNA Profiling?
- Paternity testing
- Criminal investigation
- Evolutionary biology (cladograms)
- Identifying bodies
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What is genetic modification?
- Transfer of genes from one species to another to produce a variety of organisms with desirable traits.
- Possible because of universal gene code
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How is gene transfer in bacteria with plasmids done?
- Plasmid is removed from bacteria
- Restriction enzyme (endonuclease) is used to cut open the plasmid
- The same restriction enzyme is used to remove the desired gene from the donor.
- DNA ligase splices the genes and Sticky ends with complementary base sequences are used to bind the DNA.
- The recombinant plasmid is inserted back into the host cell
- Note: When insulin producing E. Coli is being produced, reverse transcriptase is used to convert mRNA to cDNA (complementary DNA) which is then inserted into the host,
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What are some examples for genetically modified organisms?
- Sheep producing milk with anti-clotting protein which is used for example to prevent fatal clotting during childbirth
- Bt corn produces a protein that kills harmful larvae
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What are the harmful effects of GMO crops?
- Allergies in humans
- Gene jumps resulting in superweeds resistant to herbicides
- Gmo plants will outcompete wild plants and change the gene pool
- Negative economic events
- May save from hunger in the short term but the problem is the distribution of food not the production of it
- Green revolution (60s) high yielding varieties of grains and modernization of agricultural practices led to the prevention of the starvation of a billion people.
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What are clones?
Genetically identical organisms derived from a single parent organism.
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What are the types of cloning?
- Natural clones
- Reproductive clones
- Therapeutic clones
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What are natural clones?
- Vegetative propagation
- Such as rhizomes (horizontal underground growth of many grasses)
- Runners (horizontal aboveground stems (stolons)
- Potato tubers
- Grafting (disadvantage, potato famine)
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What are reproductive clones?
Parthenogenesis, in vitro fertilization, twins and triplets
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What is therapeutic cloning?
Using stem cells
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How was dolly cloned?
- Somatic cell from donor sheep was collected. Nucleus of one of the cultured cells is removed,
- Unfertilized egg from another sheep is collected and its nucleus is removed.
- The nucleus of the somatic cell and the egg cell are fused through electrical current.
- After being developed in vitro, the embryo is placed into a surrogate sheep.
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