Answers Verified 100% Correct
Balanced translocation - ANSWER -piece of chromosome is merely broken off and
attached to another one
Copy Number Variant (CNV) - ANSWER -number of copies of a particular gene
varies from one individual to the next. Gain or loose DNA. deletion, duplication,
aneuploidy
Deletion - ANSWER -one base/part of chromosome is removed from DNA
sequence
Duplication - ANSWER -section of chromosome is repeated
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) - ANSWER -can detect large or small
aneuploidies or rearrangements. Fluorescent probe binds to part of DNA.
interchromosomal - ANSWER -involve multiple chromosomes
intrachromosomal - ANSWER -involving a single chromosome
inversion - ANSWER -part of chromosome is flipped/switched
karyotype - ANSWER -complete diploid set of chromosomes grouped together in
pairs, arranged in order of decreasing size. Can be used to detect large aneuploidies
or rearrangements
microarray - ANSWER -microscope slides with thousands of tiny spots with DNA
in it to detect chromosomal aberrations
Monoploidy - ANSWER -loss of 1 set of chromosomes
Monosomy - ANSWER -condition in which an individual has one copy of a
chromosome
Nondisjunction - ANSWER -failure of separation of homologous chromosomes or
sister chromatids during meiosis. Leads to production of aneuploid germ cells
which can result in trisomy or monosomy at fertilization
,proble - ANSWER -single-stranded DNA used to detect presence of
complementary nucleic acid sequences (target sequences) by hybridization
rearrangement - ANSWER -inversion or balanced translocation. change in
structure of chromosomes.
structural variation - ANSWER -variation that affects portion of a chromosome.
Material gained, lost, rearranged. Affect large region of DNA, but not entire
chromosome
triploidy - ANSWER -presence of extra set of chromosomes
trisomy - ANSWER -3 copies of a chromosome
unbalanced translocation - ANSWER -exhange of chromosome material is unequal
resulting in extra or missing genes
whole chromosome aneuploidy - ANSWER -an entire chromosome is gained or
lost from cells that are produced. Caused by nondisjunction events. Most are lethal.
Most common exception: trisomy 21. Monosomy or trisomy
malignant carcinoma - ANSWER -invades local tissue and can spread throughout
body
adenoma - ANSWER -group of abnormal, but benign cells
Haploinsufficiency - ANSWER -losing one allele leads to decrease expression of
gene which leads to disease phenotype. Loss of func --> dominant.
cancer (cells) - ANSWER -collection of disease characterized by uncontrolled cell
growth. Can divide rapidly, evade protective mechanism that kills abnormal cells
and metastasize. Accumulation of driver mutations-influenced by genetic and
environmental factors. Caused by a series of somatic mutation - can be caused by
mutations in proto-oncogenes and tumor supressor genes
carcinogen - ANSWER -chemical or physical factors that promote mutations
clone - ANSWER -group of organisms or cells produced asexually from one
ancestor who are genetically identical
, DNA damage repair genes - ANSWER -set of proteins that recognize sites of DNA
damage and can repair them in a couple different ways. Slows down rate of
mutation in cell
Driver mutations - ANSWER -~2-20 mutations that occur over a long period of
time which allow cancer to progress in some way. Cause cancer
gain of function mutations - ANSWER -increase expression of gene or activity of
protein. Dominant. Cause cancer duplication
germline (mutations) - ANSWER -affect all the cells in an individual of the next
generation. De Novo. Can occur during sperm or egg development or after
fertilization. Inherited
Hereditary cancer syndrome - ANSWER -run in families
loss of function mutations - ANSWER -disrupts function of gene or protein (things
that normally inhibit cell growth would be less active). Recessive. Cause cancer,
by deletion.
Metastasis - ANSWER -migration to other parts of the body
mitosis - ANSWER -necessary to produce a multicellular organism from a
fertilized zygote
mutation - ANSWER -event that changes sequence of DNA, change produced by
event. change in sequence of DNA
passenger mutations - ANSWER -don't contribute to cancer progression, also
accumulate over time, don't affect cancer progression
precision medicine - ANSWER -involves targeting specific driver mutations in an
individual tumor. Targeting the specific genetics of a tumor. Medical care designed
to optimize efficiency or therapeutic benefit for particular patients
Proto-oncogenes - ANSWER -genes that encode: growth promoting factor.
Activate signals for DNA replication, mitosis, and cell division. Gain of function.