Shared Flashcard Set

Details

BIOM40004
X
118
Science
Undergraduate 4
05/31/2011

Additional Science Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What did Emil du Bois-Reymond do?
Definition
Discovered the action potential.
Term
What are the three phases for Na+ channel gating?
Definition
Resting state, activation phase and inactivation phase.
Term
What is the basic structure of the voltage-gated sodium channel?
Definition
Four six-transmembrane spanning units that fold up into a pore making up the α-subunit, with an associated β-subunit.
Term
What is the role of patch clamping?
Definition
Allows us to see individual ion channels opening and closing.
Term
What do voltage-sensitive dyes allow us to do, electrophysiologically?
Definition
To see action-potentials.
Term
What does multiphoton fluroscence microscopy allow us to do?
Definition
To image entire fields of living tissue neuronal fields.
Term
What is the main role for an ecological study?
Definition
To generate a hypothesis.
Term
What is the data type of an ecological study?
Definition
Population/groups - not of individuals.
Term
What are the main points of a cross-sectional study?
Definition
Sample of a population is collected at a single point in time.
Term
What is the main output for a cross-sectional study?
Definition
Descriptive outputs, especially prevalence.
Term
What are the pros and cons of cross-sectional studies?
Definition
Cheap and easy, though there is no explicit data on temporal relationships, and it's also weak evidence for causality.
Term
What are the main points of a case control study?
Definition
Compares previous exposure of cases and controls, matched to each other n:1 (usually 1:1).
Term
What are the benefits of using a case control study?
Definition
Provides explicit knowledge about the temporal relationship between exposure and outcome, and also good for studying rare outcomes.
Term
What is the key output for a case control study?
Definition
Odds ratio.
Term
What is an odds ratio?
Definition
An approximate risk of outcome conferred by exposure.
Term
What are the main points of a cohort study?
Definition
Longitudinal, so that subjects are followed up.
Term
What is the main output for a cohort study?
Definition
Risk ratio.
Term
What are the pros and cons of a cohort study?
Definition
Provides explicit knowledge about the temporal relationship between exposure and outcome, however, they aren't cheap or easy, and it's difficult to study rare outcomes.
Term
What is a soup assay?
Definition
Quantification of whole tissue homogeneates.
Term
What is the downside of soup assays?
Definition
Assumes all tissues are homogeneous, and that pathophysiological changes are diffuse.
Term
What is an in situ assay?
Definition
A tissue is an assay based on a tissue section.
Term
What makes a good probe for hybridisation histochemistry?
Definition
Uniqueness of complementary coding sequences (specificity) and incorporation of multiple labels (sensitivity).
Term
What does TUNEL do?
Definition
Detects DNA fragmentation, hence apoptosis.
Term
What are the problems with in situ morphometry?
Definition
Information is lost when going from 3D to 2D, systematic errors (shrinkage, compression, section thickness, etc) and statistical errors.
Term
What is histology and immunohistochemistry mainly used for?
Definition
Tells you where proteins accumulate.
Term
What is in situ hybridisation and intracellular labelling mainly used for?
Definition
Where proteins are made.
Term
What are the main aims for fetal welfare assessment?
Definition
Reduce perinatal mortality, prevent neurodevelopmental delay and evaluate whether or not the individual fetus is able to tolerate the environment.
Term
What are some forms of fetal welfare assessment?
Definition
Movement charts, ultrasound, doppler waveform studies, amniocentesis, fetal blood sampling, intermittent auscultation of the fetal heart, CTG, fetal pulse oxymetry, ECG, etc.
Term
What is CTG and what is it used for?
Definition
Cardiotocography, used to listen to and record the fetal heart and the abdominal muscle changes (+ contractions of the uterus).
Term
What is a normal fetal baseline heart rate?
Definition
110 → 160 ± 5 → 25 bpm.
Term
Are early fetal decelerations normal?
Definition
Usually not a cause for concern.
Term
Are late fetal decelerations normal?
Definition
Serious, relates to how well the placenta is providing needs to the fetus.
Term
Are variable fetal decelerations normal?
Definition
Can be normal or serious (eg., umbilical cord contraction).
Term
Are prolonged fetal decelerations normal?
Definition
No, serious.
Term
What is a 1st trimester ultrasound used for?
Definition
Dates the baby, viability and nuchal translucency (screens for Down's syndrome).
Term
What is a 2nd trimester ultrasound used for?
Definition
Checks for anomolies.
Term
What is a 3rd trimester ultrasound used for?
Definition
Growth and placental location.
Term
How are pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics different?
Definition
Pharmacogenetics is the study of how genetic differences contribute to the individual drug reponses, whereas pharmacogenomics is the correlation of variations of specific genes with individual drug responses.
Term
What is the goal of pharmacogenomics?
Definition
Safer and more effective drug therapy.
Term
In the Wistar rats in Strasbourge, how many of them had spontaneous absence-like seizures?
Definition
30%.
Term
How were the GAERS rats made?
Definition
Selective breeding from Wistar rats.
Term
How is stargazin implicated in epilepsy?
Definition
Increased mRNA in the Stargazer mouse postictally; alters AMPA receptor protein expression (hyperexcitability?).
Term
What is roughly the structure of TrK?
Definition
Extracellular domain (contains ligand-binding domain), intracellular domain (contains ATP binding site, tyrosine residues are phosphorylated here) and a transmembrane domain.
Term
What are the results of enhanced EGFR signalling?
Definition
Proliferation (↑ in proteins that promote cell cycle progression and ↓ proteins that are cell cycle checkpoint proteins), survival/resistance (↑ in anti-apoptotic proteins), angiogenesis (↑ pro-angiogenic proteins) and invasion/metastasis (↑ in extracellular matrix degredation and survival proteins).
Term
What are the mechanisms used by cancer to enhance EGFR signalling?
Definition
Overexpression of EGFR, EGFR mutation (always active), autocrine signalling (secrete own ligands), enhanced downstream signalling (no receptor needed to activate), loss of phosphotase expression (disinhibits downsteam signals).
Term
What is a knock-in mouse?
Definition
A mouse with a gene that assumes a different function.
Term
How do you create a classical transgenic mouse?
Definition
Design the construct then inject it into the nucleus of embryos.
Term
What are the pros and cons for classical transgenic mice?
Definition
Quick and easy, though random DNA integration.
Term
Why are mice used in brain research?
Definition
As they have a six-layered neocortex, short breeding and lifespans, and are inbred/genetically identical.
Term
What is face validity?
Definition
Are the symptoms the same as the human symptoms?
Term
What is construct validity?
Definition
Is the biological dysfunction share the same cause as in humans?
Term
What is predictive validity?
Definition
Are the response to treatments the same as for humans?
Term
What is the drawback for the phenotype-first approach?
Definition
A lot of work.
Term
What are the drawbacks for in vitro models?
Definition
Has to be proven in vivo.
Term
What are the drawbacks to pharmacological induction of phenotypes?
Definition
Non-specific (side-effects), not a natural presentation.
Term
What is the drawback to a lesion model?
Definition
Creates more health problems than needed.
Term
What are the fast and slow rats?
Definition
Fast (seizure-prone) and slow (seizure-resistant).
Term
Why do we use molecular approaches?
Definition
Because it proves causation.
Term
What does a Kozak site do?
Definition
Promotes expression via translation.
Term
How can one get vectors into a plasmid?
Definition
DNA-calcium phosphate precipitates, liposomes, electroporation and viral vectors.
Term
How can you purify cells that express your vector?
Definition
Drugs or FACS-based cell sorting.
Term
What can siRNA-mediated gene silencing do?
Definition
Can decrease or increase protein (loss-of-function or gain-of-function phenotypes).
Term
What are the cons for using mouse models in biological psychiatry?
Definition
Broad spectrum of symptoms and complex higher order processes.
Term
What is a nominal scale?
Definition
Where data is fit into categories (eg. hair colour).
Term
What is an ordinal scale?
Definition
Order in categories, but the differences aren't consisent (eg. cancer grade I to V).
Term
What is a numerical scale?
Definition
Quantitative observations - either continuous or discrete.
Term
Who are the principal victims for P. falciparum?
Definition
Young children and pregnant women.
Term
Who is most likely to get cerebral malaria, and why?
Definition
Children around 3-4 years old, due to infected erythrocytes clogging brain vasculature and inflammation.
Term
How does respiratory distress occur in malaria?
Definition
Acidosis due to inadequate oxygen of poorly perfused tissues.
Term
What are the main problems for malaria in pregnancy?
Definition
Anemia and low birth weight (predisposes to high infant mortality).
Term
What is bad about the naturally acquired immunity for malaria?
Definition
Takes several years to develop, is short-lived and can still have parasitaemia.
Term
What are the three immunological strategies for enhancing phagocytosis?
Definition
Neutralisation, opsonisation and complement activation.
Term
What is a SNP?
Definition
Single nucleotide polymorphism, a single nucleotide is replaced with another.
Term
What is an insertion/deletion polymorphism?
Definition
Where a nucleotide base is inserted/deleted.
Term
What is an allele?
Definition
A unique variation of a gene.
Term
What is a haplotype?
Definition
A collection of genotypes from the same chromosome.
Term
How do infected erythrocytes bind to the SCT on the placenta?
Definition
Express VAR2CSA which mediates binding to CSA.
Term
Which cytokines recruit macrophages in placental malaria?
Definition
MCP-1, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, IP-10 and IL-8.
Term
What are the two TH-cell roles in normal pregnancy and malaria?
Definition
TH2 occur during normal pregnancy, but in malaria it is mainly TH1 which causes the anemia, premature delivery and spontaenous abortion (but help clear infected erythrocytes).
Term
What does IFNγ do in placental malaria?
Definition
Secreted by TH1 cells, they enhance the phagocytic activity of macrophages.
Term
What does TNF-α do in placental malaria?
Definition
Secreted by TH1 cells, they enhance phagocytic activity of macrophages and generate NO.
Term
How does HIV affect placental malaria?
Definition
Inhibits phagocytosis by decreasing the amount of mRNA and cytokine secretion, though cell viability isn't altered.
Term
Is NF-κB activated in response to opsonised and unopsonised infected erythrocytes?
Definition
Both.
Term
What are the most common reported symptoms of womens ageing?
Definition
Aches and joint pains.
Term
What were the possible confounding factors attributable to menopausal transition?
Definition
Ageing, personal atecedents, previous surgery and country specificity.
Term
What happens to mood swings as one gets older?
Definition
Decreases, influenced by mental and physical morbidity and country.
Term
What happens to sweating, backache, lack of energy, weight gain and aching in muscles as we age?
Definition
Nothing - age independent.
Term
What symptoms are properly associated with menopause?
Definition
Trouble sleeping, night sweats, dry vagina and hot flushes.
Term
What are the criteria for biomarkers?
Definition
Accurate, data not being already available through clinical assessment and the informatin needs to aid in clinical decision making.
Term
When do endocrine biomarkers work best?
Definition
When incorporating multiple biomarkers.
Term
What are the two factors associated with Alzheimer's?
Definition
Aβ amyloid plaque and neurofibrillary tangles.
Term
What are the two pathways from APP?
Definition
Non-amyloidogenic pathway uses α-secretase, amyloidogenic pathway uses β and γ-secretase.
Term
What is the correlation with PiB retention and hippocampal volume?
Definition
Negative - no correlation in any other groups.
Term
Which malaria is associated with severe disease?
Definition
Plasmodium vivax.
Term
Which malaria causes the most deaths?
Definition
Plasmodium falciparum.
Term
Why isn't chemoprophylaxis administered for everyone in malarial regions?
Definition
Interferes with immunity, costly.
Term
What is an 'intention to treat' analysis?
Definition
Offer the entire group an intervention, and they can accept/reject, yet you still use the rejections in the analysis.
Term
Why would people reject a free screening?
Definition
Have bad health already, usually end up worse.
Term
What did screening do for colorectal cancer?
Definition
Lowered the mortality by 16-20% for the entire group; up to 33% who actually accepted the screening.
Term
How can incidence affect mortality?
Definition
More screening = removing polyps/adenomas = less turn to cancer = less incidence = less mortality.
Term
What happens in the Navβ1 mutation in epilepsy?
Definition
Ig-like loop is disrupted, less voltage-gated sodium channels in the AIS (due to the β-subunit), so that it quietens down the acceleration, changing its kinnetics.
Term
What is a biomarker?
Definition
A characteristic that is objectively measured and evaluated as an indicator of normal biological processes, pathogenic processes, or pharmacologic responses to a therapeutic intervention.
Term
Why are imaging biomarkers needed?
Definition
Non-invasive, visualiasation/quantification of molecular/cellular phenomena in vivo, and can accelerate and reduce the cost of drug discovery/trials.
Term
What are the modalities for imaging biomarkers?
Definition
X-Ray, CT, MRI, ultrasound, PET, SPECT, OCT/infrared.
Term
What are the classes for imaging biomarkers?
Definition
Diagnostic/prognostic, predictive, response and monitoring.
Term
How is APC involved with tumourigenesis?
Definition
Activates the Wnt pathway.
Term
What does Wnt do?
Definition
When it isn't activated, the entire degredation complex is bound so β-catenin can't activate genes. When activated, β-catenin breaks off and activates genes.
Term
Why does deleting the Apc gene result in tumourigenesis?
Definition
Since it leaves β-catenin activating, always promoting gene transcription.
Term
What does monocyte recruitment in malaria indicate?
Definition
Inflammation.
Term
What is the main fetal glucose transporter?
Definition
GLUT-1.
Term
How is GLUT-1 implicated in malaria?
Definition
On the microvillous membrane with malaria (no inflammation) = higher, with malaria (and inflammation) = same as controls. On the basal membrane, normal for malaria and no inflammation but decreased with inflammation.
Term
What are the main amino acid transporters in the placenta?
Definition
SNAT-1/2/4.
Term
How are the SNAT transporters implicated in malaria?
Definition
Decreases (even more with inflammation).
Term
What is responsible for antigenic variation in malaria?
Definition
var genes on PfEMP1.
Term
What enzyme transcribes the var genes in malaria?
Definition
RNA polymerase II.
Term
What is a negative regulator of var, and where does it bind?
Definition
SIP, binding to SPE2.
Term
What does a Sir2 knockout result in?
Definition
Transcription of multiple var genes.
Term
How can you mark silent/active var genes?
Definition
Silent ones with HP1, active ones with H2A.Z.
Supporting users have an ad free experience!