05: Patterns of Inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

What is a genotype?

A

The genetic composition at a given location (allele) in the genome.

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2
Q

What is a phenotype?

A

The observable expression of a genotype (morphological, clinical, biochemical).

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3
Q

What is penetrance?

A

The probability that an indivdiaul carrying a specific genotype will express ANY phenotype (all or none). Complete = 100%, incomplete = <100%.

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4
Q

What are the reasons behind reduced penetrance?

A
  • Developmental (genetic change not sufficient by itself to cause phenotype; other factors necessary)
  • Time-related (findings have onset in older age; e.g., Huntington disease, colon cancer)
  • Sex-limited (e.g., male pattern baldness)
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5
Q

What is expressivity?

A

The degree to which a phenotype is apparent, and in what manner. Due to variable organ involvement (pleiotropy: one change causes multiple effects).

Example: Marfan syndrome can be variable (severe to mild) or consistent.

Intrafamilial variability can result from modifier genes, environment, stochastics; interfamilial variability adds in the possibility of allelic heterogeneity (different mutations in same gene cause similar phenotype; e.g., forms of sickle cell disease) and locus heterogeneity (different mutations in different genes causing similar phenotypes; e.g., BRCA1 & 2).

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6
Q

What is phenotypic heterogeneity?

A

Mutations within the same gene leading to different phenotypes (e.g., hemoglobinopathies: hemolysis vs. cyanosis).

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7
Q

What is pleitropy?

A

One genetic change having a wide range of effects in multiple organ systems (e.g., Marfan syndrome, velocardiofacial syndrome).

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8
Q

What are the various modes of inheritance?

A
  • Autosomal recessive
  • Autosomal dominant
  • X-linked
  • Mitochondrial inheritance
  • Multifactorial
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9
Q

What are the pedigree symbols for male, female, pregnancy, affected, deceased, carrier and consanguinity?

A
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10
Q

What are the degrees of relationships/inheritance-shared gene percentages?

A
  • 1st degree (parents, siblings, children): 50%
  • 2nd degree (grandparents, aunts/uncles, niece/nephew, grandchildren): 25%
  • 3rd degree (cousins): 12.5%
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11
Q

Describe the characteristics of autosomal dominant conditions.

A
  • Affected person usually has at least one affected parent.
  • Affects both sexes equally.
  • Transmitted by either sex.
  • Child of affected parent has 50% risk of inheriting the disease.

Ask yourself: Males and females equally affected? Present in every generation? Children of affected parents have 50% chance of getting it?

Exceptions: de novo mutation, reduced penetrance (gender-specific?), variable expressivity, germline mosaicism (genetic change confined to gonads of the parent, not in somatic cells; children will have the mutation in somatic cells)

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12
Q

Describe the characteristics of an autosomal recessive condition.

A
  • Affected individuals usually born to unaffected parents
  • Affects either sex equally
  • Observed more frequently with consanguinity
  • 25% risk of having an affected child if both parents are carriers

Ask yourself: Does it skip generations? Are males and females equally affected? Does it occur more often with consanguinity?

Examples: CF, sickle cell, PKU, hemochromatosis

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13
Q

Describe the characteristics of an X-linked recessive condition.

A
  • Usually affects males only
  • Affected males usually born to unaffected parents
  • May have other affected male relatives on the maternal side of family
  • No male-to-male transmission

Ask yourself: Are only males affected? Is there no male-to-male transmission? Are carrier females asymptomatic or mild?

Affected females may be due to unfavorable lyonization (X-inactivation) or X0 chromosome (Turner’s syndrome), or homozygous (for common trait such as red-green color blindness; due to uniparental isodisomy of maternal X)

Examples: Duchenne muscular dystrophy

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14
Q

Describe the characteristics of an X-linked dominant condition.

A
  • Heterozygous females affected
  • Males often more affected, but not always
  • Some XLDs are male lethal (pedigree shows no affected males or females > males (2:1) or increased number of miscarriages)

Example: Craniofrontonasal dysplasia

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15
Q

Describe the characteristics of mitochondrial inheritance.

A
  • Exclusively maternally inherited
  • Phenotype dependent on percentage of abnormal mitochondria per cell (heteroplasmy) and energy requirement of cell (energy-dependent organs more susceptible: CNS, heart, muscle)
  • Presentation: can affect any organ
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16
Q

What are the characteristics of multifactorial traits?

A

Reduced penetrance, polygenic, environmental.

Examples: Asthma, hypertension, atherosclerosis, diabetes, obesity.