Lecture 8 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 5 atypical patterns of inheritance

A
  1. genetic/ genomic imprinting
  2. uniparental disomy
  3. anticipation
  4. mosaicism
  5. mitochondrial inheritance
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2
Q

Genetic Imprinting

A

some parts of the human genome are imprinted to show that they originate from their father or mother

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3
Q

what are imprinted regions in the human genome

A

areas of chromosomes 6, 7, 11, 14 and 15

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4
Q

explain what is an imprinting region

A

a region where multiple imprinted genes are in close proximity to each other in clusters or domains within the genome

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5
Q

if a person loses the 15q11 that they inherited from their normal father what will they develop

A

Prader Willi syndrome

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6
Q

if a person loses the 15q11 they inherited from their normal mother they will develop

A

Angleman’s syndrome

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7
Q

what are the clinical features of angelman syndrome

A
  • Developmental delay
  • Intellectual disability
  • Lack of speech
  • Unsteady or jerky movements
  • Happy demeanour, fits of laughter
  • Seizures
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8
Q

what are the clinical features of Prade - Willi Syndrome

A
  • small hands and feet
  • obesity
  • hypotonia ( weak muscles)
  • hyperphagia (insatiable appetite)
  • delayed sexual development
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9
Q

how are two clinically different disorders caused by the same chromosome 15q11 deletion

A

it depends on whether the deletion affects the maternal or parental copy of chromosome 15q11 because
the maternal copy expresses UEB3A and the absence of this leads to Angelman syndrome
the paternal copy expresses SNPRN and the absence of this causes Prader-Willi Syndrome

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10
Q

uniparental disomy

A

individual inherits both copies of a chromosome from one parent

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11
Q

uniparental isodisomy

A

two identical chromosome both from the same parent

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12
Q

uniparental heterodisomy

A

two different chromosomes both from the same parent

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13
Q

how can an isodisomic chromosome cause disease

A

can cause disease if isodisomy chromosome has an autosomal recessive disease mutation

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14
Q

how can a uniparental disomy cause disease

A

can cause disease if the uniparental disomy occurs in an imprinted chromosomal region

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15
Q

what is the initial event in uniparental disomy

A

a non disjunction: when the chromosomes do not seperate properly during meisos

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16
Q

trisomic embryo

A

an embryo which has an additional copy of one embryo

17
Q

Prader Willi syndrome caused by uniparental disomy

A

can occur if a baby has uniparental disomy for 2 maternal chromosome 15s. there is no parental copy of SNPRN

18
Q

Angelman syndrome caused by uniparental Disomy

A

can occur if a baby has two parental chromosome 15s. there is no maternal copy of UBE3A

19
Q

Genetic Anticipation

A

the manifestation of a genetic disorder at an earlier age or with severity in succeeding generation

20
Q

why does the severity of the genetic disorder increase generation after generation

A

disorders are caused by unstable trinucleotide repeat expansions in specific genes.
As the number of trinucleotide repeats increases beyond a certain threshold, the severity of the disorder may increase at symptoms may manifest at an earlier age

21
Q

Myotonic dystrophy - Steinert’s disease

A

autosomal dominant disorder with marked genetic anticipation - unstable triple repeat disorder

22
Q

mild late onset form of Steinert’s disease

A

mild muscle weakness
cataracts

23
Q

typical form of Steinert’s disease

A

muscle weakness
cardiomyopathy
cataracts
frontal hair loss

24
Q

Childhood/infantile form of Steinert’s disease

A

profound muscle weakness
global developmental delay

25
Q

molecular diagnostic detection of expanded triplet repeat disorders

A

detection by southern blot for larger expansions
Detection by PCR for smaller expansions /

26
Q

fragile X syndrome

A

2nd most common genetic cause of learning disability after down syndrome

  • affects males more then females
  • easier to recognize in older men
27
Q

fragile X symptoms in affected males

A

learning disability,
usually special education,
often behavior disturbance

28
Q

fragile X syndrome symptoms in adult males

A

tall
large ears
long face
loose joints

29
Q

Fragile X syndrome clinical genetics

A

only carrier females have affected children

30
Q

mosaicism

A

a mixture of 2 genetically different cell lines in a person derived from a single embryo

31
Q

somatic mosaicism

A

two different cell lines exist in several parts of the body

32
Q

gonadal mosaicism

A

two different cell lines present in only ovary or testis

33
Q

what is the most common chromosomal mosaicism disorder

A

Turner Syndrome

34
Q

symptoms of tuners syndrome

A
  • short stature
  • webbed neck
  • delayed or absent puberty
35
Q

mitochondrial inheritance as an atypical pattern of inheritance

A

mutations can occur in the mitochondrial genome independent of the cell mitosis

some mitochondrial mutations can be inherited

36
Q

heteroplasmy

A

the mixture of normal and mutant mitochondria in a cell

37
Q

examples of mitochondrial inherited disease

A

Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy
- onset visual loss in late teens, remission and then progressive visual loss

MELAS

deafness