Genomic Imprinting

Description

Lecture 10
lydiaw4
Quiz by lydiaw4, updated more than 1 year ago
lydiaw4
Created by lydiaw4 about 8 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Genomic imprinting is [blank_start]monoallelic[blank_end] gene expression that occurs in a manner specific to the parent of origin.
Answer
  • monoallelic

Question 2

Question
XY gene expression is an example of imprinting.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 3

Question
What percent of genes are imprinted?
Answer
  • ~5%
  • ~10%
  • <1%

Question 4

Question
Imprinting can work for a lifetime, or be stage specific or tissue specific.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 5

Question
[blank_start]80[blank_end]% of imprinted genes exist in clusters
Answer
  • 80

Question 6

Question
Which of these is true for imprinted genes in comparison to non-imprinted genes?
Answer
  • they have fewer introns
  • they have more introns
  • they have smaller introns
  • they have fewer and/or smaller introns
  • they have more but smaller introns

Question 7

Question
Which of these is the regulatory element that controls the imprinting of one or more genes? Hint: moving one of these can cause abnormal imprinting.
Answer
  • Imprinting control regions(ICRs)
  • Differentially methylated regions(DMRs)
  • CpG islands

Question 8

Question
Differentially methylated regions can contain imprinting control regions
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 9

Question
If a DMR has a cis-acting sequence, this means
Answer
  • it can recruit methyl specific proteins to the SAME strand/chromosome
  • it can recruit methyl specific proteins to the EITHER strand/chromosome

Question 10

Question
[blank_start]Hypo[blank_end]methylated DMRs have low amounts of methylation.
Answer
  • Hypo

Question 11

Question
[blank_start]Looping[blank_end] of the DNA can occur so that a distant segment of DNA can interact with another.
Answer
  • Looping

Question 12

Question
It is completely impossible to make a uniparental embryo
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 13

Question
Which of these is embryonic lethal?
Answer
  • gynogenetic/parthenogenetic zygote
  • androgenetic zygote

Question 14

Question
When, if ever, will demethylation affect imprinted genes?
Answer
  • fertilization
  • germ cell development
  • morula to blastocyst transition

Question 15

Question
If a gene is paternally imprinted, then a male would have one allele methylated and one not(the maternal allele). If this male is going to produce offspring, then both of the alleles must be methylated. When does this occur?
Answer
  • It will always be like this, as it is male
  • Germ cell development. The methylation status of both alleles is removed, then re-established on both alleles.
  • After fertilization. The sperm contains factors to accomplish paternal imprinting.

Question 16

Question
In one theory of how maternal vs. paternal imprinting controls gene expression, it is theorized that differential chromatin [blank_start]looping[blank_end] will occur to block the transcription of the imprinted genes. This may be aided by proteins which recognize and attach to 2 different methylated regions at the same time. In a separate theory, some proteins might recognize and bind methylated or unmethylated imprinted regions and block the transcription of the non imprinted gene(s). This is called the [blank_start]insulator[blank_end] model.
Answer
  • looping
  • insulator

Question 17

Question
Imprinted genes are resistant to genome wide DNA demethylation after fertilization.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 18

Question
Imprinted genes are resistant to genome wide DNA demethylation during germ cell development.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 19

Question
Clones have [blank_start]abnormal[blank_end] imprinting.
Answer
  • abnormal
  • normal

Question 20

Question
The male and female pronuclei are kept separate until [blank_start]fusion[blank_end].
Answer
  • fusion

Question 21

Question
The [blank_start]parental conflict[blank_end] hypothesis states that the paternal genome is more interested in growth, while the maternal genome is interested in resource conservation.
Answer
  • parental conflict
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