A1 The chromosome theory of heredity states that genes are located on chromosomes and that chromosome behavior during meiosis explains Mendelian inheritance patterns such as segregation and independent assortment.
A2 The C-value is the amount of DNA in a haploid nucleus and represents total genome size rather than gene number.
A3 The C-value paradox is the observation that genome size does not correlate with organismal complexity, meaning some simpler organisms have larger genomes than humans.
A4 Non-repetitive DNA (single-copy genes), moderately repetitive DNA (transposable elements and multicopy genes), and highly repetitive DNA (satellite DNA at centromeres and telomeres).
A5 Non-repetitive DNA consists mainly of unique, single-copy genes and unique regulatory sequences.
A6 Moderately repetitive DNA includes transposable elements and multicopy gene families such as rRNA and histone genes.
A7 Highly repetitive DNA consists of short sequences repeated many times, typically found at centromeres and telomeres.
A8 Multicopy genes are genes present in multiple copies because their products are required in large amounts, such as rRNAs, tRNAs, and histones.
A9 They can be dispersed throughout the genome, clustered in one region, or arranged in tandem arrays.
A10 n = 23 chromosomes and c = 1c, representing one haploid set of DNA.
A11 n = 46 chromosomes and c = 2c, representing two copies of the haploid DNA content.
A12 Somatic polyploidy occurs when somatic cells contain more than the normal diploid DNA content due to DNA replication without normal cell division or cell fusion.
A13 Skeletal muscle cells form by fusion of multiple myoblasts, producing one cell containing multiple diploid nuclei.
A14 Megakaryocytes undergo endomitosis, replicating DNA without cell division, resulting in a highly polyploid nucleus.
A15 Mature mammalian red blood cells eject their nucleus and therefore contain no nuclear DNA.
A16 Coloured stains show overall chromosome structure, fluorescent stains emit light under specific wavelengths, hybridization probes bind complementary DNA sequences, and antibodies bind specific proteins.
A17 Sister chromatids, centromere, p arm, q arm, and telomeres.
A18 Bands, interbands, transcriptional puffs, chromocenter, and distinct chromosome arms such as 2L and 3R.
A19 DNA sequence maps (base-pair resolution), genetic maps (recombination distances in centimorgans), and cytogenetic maps (band-based chromosomal locations).
A20 Non-disjunction during mitosis or during meiosis I or meiosis II.
A21 Improper repair of double-strand DNA breaks and non-allelic homologous recombination.
A22 A disorder caused by deletion of multiple adjacent genes, resulting in a phenotype reflecting combined gene loss.
A23 mRNA processing includes 5′ capping, removal of introns by splicing, and addition of a 3′ poly-A tail.
A24 The 5′ splice donor begins with GU and the 3′ splice acceptor ends with AG, usually preceded by a polypyrimidine tract.
A25 Intron phase describes where an intron interrupts a codon: phase 0 between codons, phase 1 after the first base, and phase 2 after the second base.
A26 Nonsense-mediated decay is a surveillance pathway that degrades mRNA containing premature stop codons to prevent production of truncated proteins.
A27 Standard PCR detects the presence, absence, or size of a specific DNA region.
A28 It detects DNA methylation status by using restriction enzymes that cut only unmethylated DNA before amplification.
A29 Fluorescently labeled ddNTPs terminate DNA synthesis, fragments are separated by capillary electrophoresis, and colored peaks indicate base identity.
A30 Two overlapping peaks at the same nucleotide position.
A31 A graphical representation of sequence conservation where letter height indicates frequency and information content.
A32 To detect genome-wide copy number changes such as deletions or duplications.
A33 To detect specific base changes or small mutations in DNA.
A34 It combines SNP haplotype information with methylation patterns to determine whether a mutation was inherited from the mother or father.
A35 It is used for low-cost long-read sequencing of plasmids to verify cloning constructs.
A36 Tiling microarrays contain probes covering continuous genomic regions to detect copy number changes or binding patterns.
A37 Genotyping microarrays contain probes for known SNP positions to determine genotype and allele frequencies.
A38 A microarray where one DNA sample is analyzed and intensity is compared computationally to reference data.
A39 A microarray where test and reference DNA are labeled with different dyes and hybridized simultaneously to compare copy number.
A40 Log2(test/reference) values around 0 indicate normal copy number, negative values indicate deletions, and positive values indicate duplications.
A41 Deep sequencing, SNP arrays, and high-resolution aCGH can detect mosaicism depending on the proportion of affected cells.
A42 aCGH cannot detect balanced translocations or inversions because no DNA copy number changes occur.
