Term
|
Definition
- Promoter - lies close gene initiation site
- Enhancer - can lie far away from a gene, can be pointing in any direction, Augment or repress basal levels of transcription
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- a tool for studying gene regulation
- identify promoters and enhancers
|
|
|
Term
test used for finding cis elements?
trans elements? |
|
Definition
- promoter trap
- mapping, biochemical studies for transcription factors
|
|
|
Term
promoter trap?
transcription factors are?
Enhancesome? |
|
Definition
- repeatedly cloning sections of DNA b4 a gene to find one that causes a difference in transcription( Enhancer trap as well)
- protein that binds to target genes' cis acting elements (block enhancesome)
- repressor or actvator
|
|
|
Term
What does RNA pol 1 make? 2? 3? |
|
Definition
- makes rRNA
- recognizes promoter with one or more enhancers
- tRNA and other small RNA's(snRNA)
|
|
|
Term
Eukaryotic genes are always ...... meaning 1 gene/promoter |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
order of proteins binding to promoter for transcription? |
|
Definition
- TBP (TATA box binding protein) binds to promoter
- then TAF to TBP
- then RNA pol II to TAF
|
|
|
Term
Activator proteins are? do what? |
|
Definition
- TF's
- interact with other proteins to activate and increase transcription of DNA by as much as 100 fold
|
|
|
Term
Two structural domains on Activators that determine function? |
|
Definition
- DNA binding domain
- transcription-activator domain
|
|
|
Term
example of transcriptional factor? |
|
Definition
- steroid hormone
- steroid binds to receptor to change its shape to allow it to bind to enhancer
- zinc finger
- helix-turn-helix
|
|
|
Term
proteins that affect transcription without binding to DNA? |
|
Definition
Co-Activator
co-repressor |
|
|
Term
How to find an activation domain? |
|
Definition
take apart activator protein gene into sections and insert b4 a reporter gene
then see which section produces transcription |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
activator protein with dimerization domains |
|
|
Term
Most eukaryotic activators must form.... to function? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- multimeric proteins that contain identical subunits
- multimeric proteins that contain nonidentical subunits
|
|
|
Term
repressors can affect the regulation of a gene in two ways? |
|
Definition
- They can stop the activation of the gene, but the expression remains at basal levels
- they can completely stop transcription by binding to promoter
|
|
|
Term
Activator - repressor competition?
Quenching? |
|
Definition
- Activator and repressor compete for who binds the enhancer. if repressor binds, there is no activation
- Quenching -1) the repressor binds to the activators DNA binding site 2)repressor binds to activation domain of activator
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- cell type
- gene it is regulating
|
|
|
Term
Chromatin structure?
Genomic imprinting? epigenetic?
|
|
Definition
- hypercondensation slows transcription
- silendces transcription selectively if inherited from one parent. whatever is causing the silencing of the gene, it is not encoded in the DNA, but inherited from outside the gene
|
|
|
Term
Regulation after transcription by? |
|
Definition
- Protein modification
- RNA splicing
- RNA stability
|
|
|
Term
what does hypercondensation cause? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What do methyl groups do?
how can they be detected?
insulator? |
|
Definition
- get in the way of RNA pol
- use restriction enzymes that usually cut DNA but dont this time becuase DNA is methylated. RUn southern blot see differnces in length
- insulated promoter blocks gene from enhancer activity
|
|
|
Term
what are structural blocks of transcription? |
|
Definition
methylation and chromatin |
|
|
Term
How might we detect if chromatin structure changes around a promoter |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Chromatin remodeling can expose... creating? |
|
Definition
promoter
DNase hypersensitive sites |
|
|
Term
T/F methylation is only inherited from the paternal side? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
RNA interference is?
miRNA's composed of? |
|
Definition
- trans acting single stranded microRNA's that regulate eukaryotic gene expression
- 60-120 base pairs of sequence complimentiarity. regualtes after transcription
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- after transcription Drosha recognizes pri-miRNA and crops it out
- Actively transported into cytoplasm and recognized by dicer
- dicer forms a di-miRNA complex that is quickly turned into functional miRNA by RISC
|
|
|
Term
two modes of RNA interference? |
|
Definition
- if miRNA is completely complementary to other RNA than it cleaves the RNA and it is rapidly degraded by RNase
- if miRNA is only partially complementary then it stays bound to the RNA and represses its espression
|
|
|
Term
locations of extranuclear DNA? |
|
Definition
chloroplast, mitochondria |
|
|
Term
attributes of human mitochondrial DNA? Yeast? |
|
Definition
- carries 37 genes, 16.5 kb in length, no introns
- four times longer, 25% introns, spacers separate genes
|
|
|
Term
genetic code is not...... |
|
Definition
universal. same codons in mtDNA and regular DNA create linkage of different peptides |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
endosymbiont theory?
evidence? |
|
Definition
- the theory that eukaryotes engulfed bacteria cells and are living symbiotically together today
- mt and cpDNA are similar to that of bacteria
- inhibitors of bacterial translation have same effect on cp and mtDNA but not nuclear DNA.
|
|
|
Term
evidence of gene transfer from nucleus to organelles? organelle to organelle? |
|
Definition
- COXII gene - gene found in nuclear DNA in some plants and mt DNA in other plants
- nuclear copy lacks introns suggesting an RNA intermediate
- chunks of cpDNA are found in mtDNA
|
|
|
Term
mtDNA has a .... rate of mutation than nuclear DNA |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in most species mtDNA is inherited from the... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
heteroplasmic
homoplasmic |
|
Definition
contain a mixture of organelle DNA
contain one type of organelle |
|
|
Term
consequence of women with heteroplasmic LHON mutation after fertilization? |
|
Definition
some cells produce low amounts of ATP while others are okay. if cells with low production are in optic nerve then LHON mutation present |
|
|
Term
heteroplasmy is known to be the cause of many rare....? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what influences phenotype with mutant mtDNA |
|
Definition
tissue in which it resides and percentage of mutant mtDNA |
|
|
Term
in identical twins mtDNA genome is .... and nucear DNA is .... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
highly deleterious mtDNA replicates and increases mutation over time lowering ATP production in cells as one gets older. Alzheimer's linked with low ATP production |
|
|
Term
mechanism of uniparental inheritance |
|
Definition
- degradation of male gametes
- paternal organelle genomes are distributed to cells that are destined to be destroyed
- after fertilization the paternal organelle is destroyed
|
|
|
Term
5 assumptions of hardy weinburg law |
|
Definition
- infinite population
- no mutation
- no immigration/emmigration
- random sex
- no selection
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- changing of allele frequency over time
- micro - generation to generation within a species
- over geological time among species
|
|
|
Term
fitness
natural selection |
|
Definition
- ability to survive and pass on gene's
- individuals with higher fitness reproduce more often than individuals with lower fitness
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- recalibrating allele frequency due to selection
- selection coefficient that subtracts from 1
|
|
|
Term
Therefore change in q is always? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why is selection unable to completely get rid of recessive alleles? |
|
Definition
- becuase the recessive allele can be maintained in heterozygotes who have no disadvantage, or may even have an advantage(malaria)
|
|
|
Term
Evolutionary equilibrium? |
|
Definition
a balance between mutation to a new allele to selection against the allele |
|
|
Term
what if a genetic disease has a late onset? |
|
Definition
then it has no negative effect on reporduction and the passing of the alleles |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
chance fluctuations in allele frequency that have neutral effect on fitness |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- is the loss of genetic variation that occurs when a new population is established by a very small number of individuals from a larger population
- could lead to speciation and evolution of new species (forms new equilibrium for sure)
|
|
|
Term
factors that contribute to fast evolution of resistance in bacteria |
|
Definition
- fast life cycle
- strong selection by antibiotics
- human error
- large population densities
- variety of ways genes are transfered
|
|
|
Term
multifactorial
quantitative
polygenic |
|
Definition
- multiple factors that contribute to a trait either biological or environmental
- continous trait that varies of a range measurement
- quantitative trait that is controlled by two or more genes
|
|
|
Term
difference from curve to mean in identical plants is?
difference from curve to curve is? |
|
Definition
environmental variance
genetic variance |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the proportion of phenotypic variance connected with genetic variance |
|
|
Term
heritability of 1 means? 0? |
|
Definition
- straight line - correlation between parent and offspring having the same attributes
- random no correlation between parent and offspring
|
|
|
Term
haplotype? purpose of haplotype? |
|
Definition
- combination of markers
- look for combination between haplotype and disease phenotype
- helps narrow down chromosome function and markers that are linked to disease
|
|
|