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GS351 Final Review. June 6, 2014. GS 351 Final. Time/data: June 9, 8:30-10:20 a.m. Location: here Test info: 7-9 problems Should take less time than the midterm Matching, true/false, s hort answer Bring a calculator. Recommendations for Studying. Pay attention now
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GS351 Final Review June 6, 2014
GS 351 Final Time/data: June 9, 8:30-10:20 a.m. Location: here Test info: • 7-9 problems • Should take less time than the midterm • Matching, true/false, short answer • Bring a calculator
Recommendations for Studying • Pay attention now • Go over problem sets • Reread all lecture slides • Read the articles on the course website
Advise for Taking the Test • Be early • Bring a calculator (NOT A PHONE) • Do the easy problems first • Don’t spend too much time on one problem • Ask for clarification
Some Key Topics • Human Genome Project (public vs private) • How hominids are related • Calculating how long ago two species diverged • Genetic Anticipation: mechanism and effects • Unequal crossing: mechanism and effects • Fragile X syndrome • Autism: causes and risks • Tay-Sachs disease: cause and prevention • Genetic concordance • Determining the mode of inheritance of disease • Out of Africa theory: genetic effect on different populations • Gene Therapy
Spectrum of Genetic Variation Sequence • Single base pair changes – point mutations • Small insertions/deletions – frameshift, microsatellite, minisatellite • Structural variation (>10 kb) • Large-scale deletions, inversions, and insertions • Changes in copy (gains and losses) called CNVs (copy number variants) • Chromosomal variation – translocations, inversions, fusions Cytogenetics
Two DIFFERENT Mechanisms for Mutation • Repeat Expansion • Triple repeats get varying in length • Threshold effect: more likely to grow • Once too big, they can cause disease • Copy Number Variants (CNVs) • Repetitive regions in genome can misalign • Can get unequal crossing over • Deletes or duplicates genes between repeats
Unusual Inheritance Pattern for an X-linked Trait • T = normal transmitting male • Risk of mental retardation depended on position within the pedigree • Daughters of normal transmitting males = 0% risk • Grandsons’ risk = 40-50% • Later generations had a higher risk of developing disease then preceding generations • Genetic anticipation
Molecular Explanation • CGG repeats are generally unstable and can increase and decrease in size but usually take many generations to change in copy • Once they reach 55 repeat units the chance that they will increase in the next generation increases very rapidly • Once they reach 200 repeats there is a 100% chance that they will jump to 1000 repeat units or more but this jump requires that it be transmitted from a mother • Once the repeat is >200 repeats it interferes with replication of the DNA (fragile site upon culture) and transcription—no transcription = no protein • The FMR1 protein is important in regulating other genes near the synapse—absence of protein = disease
Genetic Anticipation Explained A fragile X family • Progressive increase in size of CGG repeat • Requires a female transmission to go to full mutation
C G G G C C Errors during Replication or Repair falls off & re-lands on copied repeat nick & repair expanded repeat
16p 16p 16p 16m 16m 16m Repeated sequence copies in meiosis A A Replication A Figure 12.7
16p 16p 16p 16m 16m 16m Normal alignment Recombination Correct pairing of homologs Figure 12.7
16p 16p 16m 16m Recombination Misalignment 16p One copy and deletion of a region 16m Three copies with duplication Similar sequences may lead to mispairing Figure 12.7
A B C TEL A B C TEL NAHR GAMETES A B C A B C TEL TEL Intellectual Disability/Autism/Epilepsy As a result of dosage sensitivity of genes Interspersed Duplications Create Lots of Copy Number Variation in Humans
Mouse Genome does not! • ~3% duplication • >20 kb, >95% • Feb. 2006; mm8 • 87% are tandem pairwise
Human Genome has Large Repeatsthat are spread throughout! chr1 chr2 chr3 chr4 chr5 chr6 chr7 chr8 chr9 chr10 chr11 chr12 chr13 chr14 • ~4% duplication • >20 kb, >95% • ~4 average # duplicates • 59.5% interspersed (>1 Mbp) chr15 chr16 chr17 chr18 chr19 chr20 chr21 chr22 chrX chrY She, X et al., (2004) Nature 431:927-30
(1920s) (1997) Height as a Quantitative Trait
Human vs. Ape Genetic Variation • A tree comparing 70 humans, 30 chimpanzees, 5 bonobo, 11 gorilla and 14 orang-utan • Humans show ½ to 1/3rd of the genetic variation that we observe within other ape species.
Humans nearly went extinct ~70,000 years ago! # at this value A lot 0 # of Differences