Gene Mutations
Gene Mutations part 2
Clinical Cytogenetics
Clinical Cytogenetics part 2
misc.
100

A purine replaced by purine or pyrimidine replaced by pyrimidine is a

transition base-pair substitution

100

the most common hereditary disorder in the US (1 in 8 are carriers)

hereditary hemochromatosis (HFE gene Cys282Tyr)

100

William's Syndrome causes de novo deletion of 25-28 genes on chromosome 7. What 2 critical genes are lost and their functions?

ELN- elastin component

LIMK1- brain expressed kinase, visual-spatial cognition deficits

100

short telomeric deletion near the end of chrom. 4 results in what syndrome?

Wolf-Hirschhorn (greek warrior helmet NSD2 gene)

100

what results from nondisjunction during mitotic division?

mosaicism (Turner and Kleinfelter)

200

polymorphisms are often

common and benign
200

Fragile X syndrome (FMR-1 gene, X-linked dom) has this many trinucleotide repeats of CGG

>200 CGG repeats (normal is <40)

200

one or more complete sets of chromosomes is called?

one or more individual chromosomes is added or removed is called?

polyploidy

aneuploidy

200

FISH studies can detect which two chromosomal deletion syndromes?

Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome & William's Syndrome

200

nondisjunction in the father effecting the SHOX gene causes what syndrome?

Turner Syndrome (haploinsufficiency)

300

A missense mutation in the beta globulin chain of hemoglobin is seen in

Sickle Cell Disease (auto recess) (hydrophilic Glu for hydrophobic Val)

300

>40 CAG repeats on HTT gene on chrom. 4 leads to additional toxic glutamines. This is indicative of complete penetrance of which disease

Huntington's Disease (auto dom)

300

movement of genetic material between non-sister chromatids on homologous chromosomes

movement of genetic material between nonhomologous chromosomes

crossing over vs translocation

300

Prader-Willi syndrome can be caused by uniparental disomy or microdeletions in chrom 15. Which parent's homolog was deleted?

Paternal deletion 

300

most inherited metabolic diseases are what classification?

Autosomal recessive

400

thalassemia alpha and beta produce

homotetramers of globin chain

400

3 explanations for dominant disorders

haploinsufficiency, GOF mutations, dominant negative mutations 

400

Out of the 6 possible gametes to come from reciprocal translocation, how many are viable?

2

400

The most common inherited neurological disorder

Type 1A Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease (PMP22 gene on chrom. 17)

400

TP53 mutations do not follow the two hit model due to what?

dominant negative effect

500

BCL11A downregulation increasing HbF levels can be used as a treatment for

beta thalassemia major

500

Which nucleotide base often fills the space opposite of the apurinic site

Adenine (A)

500

The most common Robertsonian translocation occurs between which chromosomes?

14q21q

500

A pericentric inversion...

includes the centromere

500

What autosomal dominant syndrome has a TP53 mutation that predisposes someone to early-onset cancers?

Li-Fraumeni Syndrome (LFS)

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