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Il “Dogma Centrale” della Biologia
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Cromosomi umani condensati
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Bandeggio cromosomico
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Genes and Diseases 1902, A. Garrod proposes the “one gene one enzyme ” hypothesis (upon Bateson’s suggestion) Garrod, A. E. The incidence of alkaptonuria: a study in chemical individuality. Lancet II: , 1902.
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The Genetic Basis of Diseases: Chromosomal Aberrations
1956 Human karyotype is defined (Tjio J.H & Levan A The chromosome number of man. Hereditas 42, 1-6) 1970s chromosome banding techniques Many known pathological aberrations aneuploidies (e.g., Down syndrome) Translocations (e.g., leukemias) Deletions (e.g., Prader-Willis syndrome, del 15q11-13)
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The Genetic Basis of Diseases: Single Gene Mutations
Pathogenic Mutation: any change in the DNA sequence leading to a disease Aa changes (e.g., cystic fibrosis) Non-sense changes Splicing mutations Deletions/insertions (affecting or not the ORF): e.g., DMD
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The Genetic Basis of Diseases: Somatic Mutations and Cancer
Mutations in ‘tumour suppressor genes’ (Rb, BRCA1 e 2 etc.) Mutations in oncogenes (Myc, Src) Activating mutations Chromosomal aberrations (e.g., CML). Mutations in genes involved in DNA repair mechanisms (e.g., colon cancer).
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The Genetic Basis of Infectious Diseases
Genetic material introduced into the host (DNA or RNA) Expression of exogenous genes (including oncogenes, e.g., HPV16-E6) Can integrate in the host genome (e.g., HIV) Many polymorphisms are known to either increas or decrease susceptibility to infectious disease (e.g., HIV-protective CC chemokine receptor 5-Δ32/Δ32)
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