PWS Basics
Genomic Imprinting
Methods & Techniques
Results & Findings
100

This genetic disorder is characterized by hypotonia, hyperphagia, and obesity.

What is Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS)?

100

This process causes one parental allele to be silenced. 

What is genomic imprinting?

100

This gene-editing tool was used to knock out ZNF274.

What is CRISPR/Cas9?

100

After ZNF274 knockout, ZNF274 binding does this.

What is decrease?

200

PWS is caused by the loss of gene expression from this parent.

What is the paternal chromosome?

200

In PWS, maternal genes are present but ________.

What is silenced?

200

This method was used to measure gene expression levels. 

What is qRT-PCR?

200

After ZNF274 knockout, H3K9me3 levels do this.

What is decrease?

300

This specific chromosome region is affected in PWS.

What is chromosome 15 (q11-q13)?

300
This histone modification is associated with gene repression.

What is H3K9me3?

300

This technique measures protein-DNA interactions.

What is ChIP (Chromatin Immunoprecipitation)?

300

These types of genes were reactivated after ZNF274 KO.

What are maternal PWS genes?

400

This condition occurs when both chromosome copies come from the mother.

What is maternal uniparental disomy (UPD)?

400

This protein is responsible for adding repressive marks in PWS.

What is ZNF274?

400

These cells were used and then differentiated into neurons. 

What are induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)?

400

Gene reactivation was strongest in this cell type.

What are neurons?

500

This early-life symptom of PWS is characterized by low muscle tone.

What is neonatal hypotonia?

500

This region controls imprinting and remains methylated even after KO.

What is the PWS imprinting center (PWS-IC)?

500

This cell stage comes before mature neurons in differentiation. 

What are neural progenitor cells (NPCs)?

500

These genes were NOT rescued after ZNF274 KO (name one).

What are SNRPN exon 1; NDN?

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