B C D E E- . What are p53 genotypes of the following tissues (represent the wild-type allele with + and the mutant allele with -) 1. Control: 2. Blood: 3. Tumor: 4. Normal Breast Tissue:
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- True or false? The most common form of Down's Syndrome results from a spontaneous, somatic, gene mutation.MM, a 54-year old female presents to the Family Medicine Clinic due to a 2-week history of increasing shortness of breath and cough and mild/moderate pain in left side. She was diagnosed with infiltrating intraductal adenocarcinoma of the left breast 5 years ago; at that time, ER(-)/ PR(-); her-2/neu(+); p53(+); staged as having T3N1M0, stage IIIA, high-risk breast cancer. She underwent a modified radical mastectomy with axillary node dissection followed by 6 cycles of CMF chemotherapy. Her mother and sister also had a history of breast cancer. Past Medical History Gravida 4, para 4; menses onset age 13; HTN x 10 years; Type 2 DM x 8 years; breast CA described above; remained disease free until present follow up. Past Surgical History: Left modified radical mastectomy 5 years ago; cholecystectomy 14 years ago. Medications: Glyburide, 5mg PO BID Verapamil SR, 240mg PO daily Furosemide, 40mg PO daily Allergies: NKDA Physical Examination: GEN: Well-developed, obese woman in no…In a few sentences, describe how p53 guards the genome. Include at least two specific ways that p53 guards the genome. In a few more sentences, describe the structure and function of the p53 protein. Structure: what domains are present in the p53 protein? Do p53 work as a single protein or as part of a complex? Function: what do the different domains do? How can p53 do so many different things?
- Southern Blotting & Detection of sickle cell disease: Please interrupt the following results and draw a Punnett square, and answer the questions. •Discuss figures (gel figure and Punnett square) one by one. •You must provide discussion for each lane of the gel, how you make out normal, carrier, disease (allelic patterns- why so?), control IMPORTANT POINTS TO REMEMBER: •Homozygous (one band)- the size of the band (lower or higher in the gel) determines if normal (both alleles cut by MSt II, hence band lower) or diseased (both alleles uncut and hence at the higher position in gel) •Heterozygous (two bands in the same lane) denotes a carrier (lower band from normal allele which is cut by RE & upper sickle cell allele band is uncut)Genetic instability in the form of point mutations, chromosome rearrangements, andepigenetic changes needs to be maximal to allow the development of cancer.(a) With diagrams explain:(i) point mutations (ii) chromosome rearrangement (iii) epigenetic changesFragile X syndrome why is interesting Fragile X syndrome What are the symptoms or characteristics of this disorder or trait? What is the prevalence of the trait or disorder? What are the main genetic factors? s the genetic cause of this disorder or trait known? What gene(s) have been proven to be involved? Or, if not known, what genes are thought to be involved? Is it caused by a single gene? polygenic? Multifactorial? Devote a few paragraphs to this This could be one of the longest parts of the paper, if you choose to focus on this. If multiple genes are thought to be involved, discuss the specific role of at least one of them in depth (if known). Is the gene you’re discussing thought to play a major or a minor role in the phenotype? What chromosome is it on? What protein does it code for, and how might the protein possibly contribute to the phenotype? If no genes have yet been identified, indicate this, and devote at least one paragraph to any current efforts to determine which…
- A 20-year-old woman comes to your genetic counselling center because she knows that Huntington disease occurs in members of her family. Huntington is an autosomal dominant disease that often becomes apparent around 35–40 years of age. Her paternal grandfather was afflicted, but so far her 41 year old father shows no symptoms. Her two great-great grandmothers on her father's side were healthy well into their 90s, and one of her great-great grandfathers died of unknown causes at 45. Testing for Huntington disease is extremely expensive, but she is concerned that she may fall victim to this disease and wants to plan her life accordingly. After examining her pedigree you advise her to: not get tested because her father is only a carrier and it is very unlikely her mother is a carrier. not get tested because there is no possibility that she is homozygous. get tested because her father could be a carrier. not get tested because only males in her family get the disease. not get tested…Equalizing the Expression of X Chromosome Genes in Males and Females Males have only one X chromosome and therefore only one copy of all genes on the X chromosome. Each gene is directly expressed, thus providing the basis of hemizygosity in males. Females have two X chromosomes, but one is always inactivated. Therefore, females, like males, have only one functional copy of all the genes on the X chromosome. Again, each gene must be directly expressed. Why, then, are females not considered hemizygous, and why are they not afflicted with sex-linked recessive diseases as often as males are?Analysis of X-Linked Dominant and Recessive Traits Suppose a couple, both phenotypically normal, have two children: one unaffected daughter and one son affected with a genetic disorder. The phenotype ratio is 1:1, making it difficult to determine whether the trait is autosomal or X-linked. With your knowledge of genetics, what are the genotypes of the parents and children in the autosomal case? In the X-linked case?