Lecture 7 Flashcards

1
Q

what is the least common form of gene inheritance

A

X linked inheritance

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2
Q

how are X linked recessive inheritance caused

A

a mutation in a single gene on the X chromosome

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3
Q

explain why a male is hemizygous

A

a male with pathogenic variants is affected, he does not have a second X chromosome to compensate

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4
Q

how can the condition be recessive in the female carrier who is not affected

A

when her normal copy of the gene on her second X chromosome compensates

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5
Q

what is the commonest severe X-linked recessive disorder

A

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

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6
Q

what does Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy cause

A
  • progressive muscle weakness and wasting from early childhood
  • wheelchair bound in early teens
  • death in late teens or early twenties
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7
Q

Symptoms of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

A

delayed walking - difficulty climbing stairs

late heart muscle involvement

  • progressive muscle weakness
  • scoliosis
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8
Q

what are the investigations for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

A

very high levels of creatine kinase in blood
Blood CK levels are a marker for muscle damage

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9
Q

how common is Duchenne Muscular dystrophy

A

1 in 5000 births

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10
Q

Haemophilia

A

lack of clotting factor in blood,
which normally allows formation of clots after injury

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11
Q

Hemophilia symptoms

A

bleeding after surgery
spontaneous bleeding into joints and muscles

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12
Q

Treatment of Hemophilia

A

replacement of deficient factors

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13
Q

X chromosome inactivation

A

early in embryogenesis in females, one of the two X chromosomes in each cell is randomly inactivated by the addition of methyl groups to the chromosomal DNA

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14
Q

how is X-inactivation controlled

A

control is directed by XIST itself a gene on the X chromosome

XIST controls methylation of most of the genes on the X chromosome to inactivate them

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15
Q

causes of a female affected by an X-linked recessive disorder

A
  1. carrier mother marries an effected father
  2. Non-random X linked chromosome inactivation
  3. Turner’s syndrome
  4. X-autosome translocation
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16
Q

explain turners as a cause of female affected by an X linked recessive disorder

A

in classical turners, a woman only has a single X chromosome

if this X chromosome has a pathogenic variant in a gene on the X chromosome, she will also show that X linked disorder

17
Q

translocations

A

a type of chromosomal abnormality where a segment of one chromosome breaks off and attaches to another chromosome.

18
Q

what are the two types of X linked dominant inheritance

A
  • x linked dominant disorder that affects both males and females, but females may be less affected
  • X linked dominant which affects females only, pathogenic variant is lethal in hemizygous male pregnancies
19
Q

rickets symptoms

A

short stature
bowed bones

20
Q

what are most rickets due to

A

dietary or skin deficiency of vitamin D

21
Q

family tree of an X linked disorder.
what is the chance of the child of an affected woman being affected

A

50:50

22
Q

incontinentia pigmenti

A

X linked dominant disorder - lethal in males

mosaic patterns of skin pigmentation