Glossary
Alleles - Alternative forms of a gene at the same locus.Autoradiography - Detection of radioactively labelled molecules with X-ray film.
Autosome - Any chromosome other than the sex (X or Y) chromosomes.
Carrier - A healthy person who is a heterozygote for a recessive trait. Also refers to a person with a balanced chromosomal translocation.
Clone - All the cells derived from a single cell by repeated cell division and having the same genetic constitution.
Coding sequence - Sequence of bases in DNA which specifies the structure of a protein.
Consanguineous - Where two people are related by blood (i.e. share a least one common ancestor).
Consultand - A person requesting genetic counselling.
Cytogenetics - The branch of genetics concerned with the physical structure and appearance of chromosomes.
Dominant - A trait expressed in a heterozygote.
Dysmorphic - An alteration in the normal form or appearance.
Empiric risk - Recurrence risk based on experience rather than calculation.
Expressivity - Variation in the severity of a genetic trait.
Flanking markers - Markers on either side of a disease locus.
Gamete - A germ cell (sperm or ovum).
Gene - The unit of inheritance: a part of the DNA molecule which directs synthesis of a specific polypeptide.
Gene tracking - Following a gene through a family by observing the inheritance of a marker which is being inherited alongside the gene.
Genetic counselling - Process by which information on genetic disorders is given to a family.
Genotype - The genetic constitution of an individual.
Gonadal mosaicism - Presence of a mutation in germline but not somatic cells, which results in transmission of a genetic disorder by a healthy person.
Heterozygote - An individual with one normal and one mutant allele at a given locus on a pair of homologous chromosome.
Homologous - Matched (usually of a pair of chromosomes).
Homozygote - Person having two identical alleles at a particular locus on homologous chromosomes.
Hybridisation - Process by which single strands of DNA (or RNA) with homologous sequences bind together.
Karyotype - The classified chromosome complement of an individual or cell.
Locus- The precise location of a gene on a chromosome.
Marker - Biochemical or DNA polymorphism occurring close to a gene and used in gene tracking.
Mendelian disorder - Inherited disorder due to a defect in a single gene.
Mitochondria - organelles in a cell's cytoplasm chiefly responsible for "energy production".
Monosomic - Having only one of the pair of genes, DNA segments or whole chromosomes from a pair of homologous chromosomes.
Mosaic - Individual derived from a single fertilised egg, but where an error in cell division or a new mutation leads to cells of two or more different genotypes.
Multifactorial - Inheritance due to multiple genes at different loci which summate and interact with environmental factors.
Mutation - An alteration in the structure of DNA.
Penetrance - Probability that a disease genotype will result in an abnormal phenotype.
Phenotype - The observable characteristics of an individual.
Polymorphism - Genetic characteristic with more than one common form in a population.
Proband - The individual who draws medical attention to a family.
Probe - A DNA (or RNA) fragment which has been labelled (usually with radioactivity) and used in a hybridisation assay to identify related DNA (or RNA) sequences.
Recessive - A trait expressed only in homozygotes.
Sex-linked - Inheritance of a gene carried on a sex chromosome.
Single gene disorder - Disease whose inheritance is controlled by one pair of genes (one on each homologous chromosome).
Somatic cell - Any cell in the body except the gametes.
Trait - Any gene-determined characteristic.
Translocation - The transfer of chromosomal material between chromosomes.
Trisomy - Three copies of a given chromosome per cell.
This page was last modified on Fri Feb 12 2010



