Single Gene Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Explain dominant and recessive inheritance patterns.

A

Dominant: Aa x aa
50% not affected; 50% affected

Recessive: Aa x Aa
25% affected; 50% carriers; 25% not affected

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2
Q

Compare and Contract X-linked and autosomal inheritances

A

auto recessive:

  1. both sexes affected equally
  2. parents are carriers
  3. consanguinitiy present

auto dom:

  1. both sexes affected equally
  2. at least 1 parent affected
  3. homo > hetero
  4. can be transmitted father to son

x-linked recessive:

  1. no father/son
  2. boys > girls
  3. affected boys usually have unaffected parents

x-dom:

  1. no father/son
  2. girls > boys, as males die
  3. affected girls will have affected fathers
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3
Q

Explain the inheritance of mitochondrial disorders

A

comes from the mother; cells contain varying fragments of defective mtDNA molecules (heteroplasmy)

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4
Q

Draw and interpret a pedigree

A
  1. is disease affecting all children?

no –> father/son transmission?

if not –> more boys than girls –> if yes, auto recessive

if yes –> auto dom/auto recessive –> affected parents? –> auto dom

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5
Q

Explain the impact of consanguinity on the risk for recessive disorders.

A

Causes the rare allele to stay in the population; associated with coiffienct of inbreeding; there is a 1/4 change that a child will have the condition.. and a 1/64 change it will be passed on to cousins? or something like that lol.

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6
Q

Describe the implications of incomplete penetrance, variable expressivity, new mutations and triplet expansions on the interpretation of autosomal dominant disorders.

A

incomplete penetrance: the patient has the disease but does not show symptoms

variable expressivity: the patient has the disease and will show symptoms; but the severity of the symptoms displayed is variable (example: neurofibromatosis)

new mutations: are seen in achondroplasia, etc

triplet expansions: Huntingtons Disease has many CAG repeat regions.. if > 40, they will have early onset; if 35-40.. at a high risk

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7
Q

Contrast haploinsufficiency and dominant negative effect in the development of osteogenesis imperfecta subtypes.

A

haploinsufficiency: mutation in Type 1 collagen; all the collagen made is normal, but a null mutation is causing the amount produced to be reduced in half.

dominant-negative: mutation causing misfolding of collagen results in dominant/negative affect

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8
Q

Explain the dominant inheritance of familial hypercholesterolemia.

A

1/500 will get it. 2x if hetero; 4x if homo.

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9
Q

Contrast the effects of gain-of-function and loss-of-function mutations in the RET gene.

A

LOF: Hirschsprung disease; impairs development of neurons that population the colon, giving rise to aganglionic colon

GOF: Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia (MEN); RET is constiutiively active, and causes proliferation of neuroendocrine cells

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10
Q

What 2 disorders are autosomal recessive? what 6 are autosomal dominant?

A

recessive:
1. PKU (inborn error of metabolism)
2. Cystic Fibrosis

dominant:
1. neurofibromatosis
2. huntingtons
3. Achondroplasia
4. Osteogenesis Imperfecta
5. Familial Hypercholesteremia
6. Li Fraumeni

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11
Q

What diseases are x-linked recessive? X-linked dom?

A

X-linked recessive:
Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophies; mutation in dystrophin gene

X-linked dom: Incontinentia Pigmenti: results from defect in NEMO

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12
Q

Mitochondrial disease?

A

LHON: mutation in ND1 gene; inhibits ETC

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13
Q

What is allele heterogeneity?

A

different mutations in the same gene cause different phenotypes (can be gain-of-function or loss-of-function)

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14
Q

What is locus heterogeneity?

A

mutations in different genes cause the same phenotype

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15
Q

What are modifiers?

A

individual genetic background modifies the protein

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16
Q

What is pleiotrophy?

A

1 mutation causes multiple phenotypes

17
Q

What are the 5 types of proteins that can be undergo single gene defects?

A

enzymes (recessive)
transport and storage (recessive or dom)
structural (dominant)
growth, differentiation, and development (dominant)
receptor and signaling proteins (dominant)

18
Q

What type of disease is Ehler-Danlos Syndrome in terms of mode of inheritance?

A

AR and AD

19
Q

What are 4 other examples of Auto recessive disease?

A

Fruc 1,6 bisphosphatase defiency
Glycogen Storage Disorders
Sickle Cell
Sucrase-Isomaltase

20
Q

What is an example of X-recessive from a previous chaper?

A

G6PDH defiency