multifactorial inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

simple medelian trait

A

genetic variant leads to a trait

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2
Q

variable disease progression depends on

A

other factors besides just genetic variant

different alleles in the same gene associated with varying severity

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3
Q

complex traits explain

A

multifactoial ineritance.

Many things lead to trait

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4
Q

examples of multifactorial inheritance

A
  1. cancer
  2. type 1/2 diabetes
  3. alzheimers
  4. IBD
  5. schizophrenia
  6. cleft lip/palate
  7. hypertension
  8. asthma
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5
Q

complex traits/Multifactorial inheritance

A
  1. complex trait aggregates in family
  2. do not follow simple mendelian mode of inheritance
  3. need to distinguish between clustering in families due to genetic facts and those due to shared environmental facts.
  4. epidemiologic twin, adoption and immigration studies used
  5. each measure of genetic contribution need to be interpreted carefully, but as the group can provide compelling evidence fro genetic contribution to trait
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6
Q

twin studies: mono vs. dizygotic

A

mono: share 100% DNA
certain amount of environment

di: share 50% of DNA certain amount of environment

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7
Q

if twins raised together and assume same degree of similar environment, then difference in concordance rate between mono and di likely due to

A

genetic factors

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8
Q

If twins raised apart and assume had different environments then similarities in trait are likely due to

A

genetic factors

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9
Q

adoption studies

A

compare similarity btwn biologic siblings raised apart and adoptive siblings

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10
Q

If biological sib 2 more concordant with biological sibling than adopted sibling, then have evidence for _____ as opposed to _____

A

genetic component as opposed to environmental component

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11
Q

risk of disease in relatives

A

risk of disease in siblings of affected/ risk of disease in general population

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12
Q

heritability

A

h2

proportion of variance in trait that is due to genetic variation

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13
Q

low heritability

A

less than 50%

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14
Q

high heritability

A

more than 50%

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15
Q

characteristics of complex traits

A
  1. incomplete penetrance
  2. variable epxressivity
  3. heterogeneity –allele and locus
  4. presence of phenocopies
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16
Q

penetrance

A

relationship between trait and genotype

probability that an individual will develop the trait if they have the genotype

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17
Q

complete penetrance

A

everyone with pre-disposing genotype will get the trait

18
Q

incomplete penetrance

A

some with genotype will not get the trait

19
Q

susceptibility variants for complex diseases are generally though to have ______

A

low penetrance

20
Q

example of incomplete penetrance

A

type 1 diabetes.

up to 20% of general population has two highest risk haplotypes, but incidence is only 0.4%

21
Q

variable expressivity

A

individuales with the same variant do not show precisely the same disease or quantitative phenotype characteristics
example age dependent diabetes

22
Q

allelic heterogeneity

A
  1. different alleles in the same gene result in the same trait
  2. different alleles in the same gene result in different traits
  3. ex. cystic fibrosis
  4. many allele appear to have a very similar clinical progression of the disease
  5. allele can be grouped into classes; severity of lungs and pancreatic involvement depends on the allele class
23
Q

locus heterogeneity

A
  1. variants in different genes result in very similar clinical presentation
  2. early onset alzheimer disease
  3. mutations on 3 different genes all result in identical clinical manifestations of early onset AD
24
Q

phenocopy

A

environmentally cause phenotype that mimics the genetic version of the trait

25
Q

example of phenocopy

A

thalidomide-induced limb malformation vs. genetically induced

26
Q

Concordance rates are often used to

A

compare MZ and DZ twins. A higher concordance rate for disease in MZ than DZ twins suggests that genetic variation contributes to variation in risk more than variation in non-genetic factors

27
Q

A much higher correlation among MZ compared to DZ twins for a quantitative trait suggests that

A

genetic variation is relatively more important than variation in non-genetic factors.

28
Q

The Heritability of a trait is the proportion of

A

total variance in a trait that is due to variation in genes.

29
Q

A high heritability implies

A

that differences among individuals with respect to a trait such as blood pressure in a population can be attributed to differences in the genetic make-up.

30
Q

The key to interpreting heritability estimates is to remember that we’re talking about and describing

A
variation in BOTH genetic factors AND non-genetic factors. 
 If one (alleles or environment) doesn’t demonstrate much variability, then it doesn’t have much potential to explain variability in a trait.
31
Q

Implication: A high heritability does not imply that

A

non-genetic factors are not important. A low heritability does not imply that environment is not important.

32
Q

incomplete penetrance example

A

Type 1 diabetes and MHC

33
Q

variable expressivity example

A

maturity onset diabetes i the young (MODY)

34
Q

Variable expressivity means that

A

no two individuals with the same genetic variant have exactly the same disease characteristics

35
Q

heterogeneity examples

A

cyctic fibrosis

alzheimers disease

36
Q

heterogeneity

A

allele and locus: The “same” disease can be caused by different alleles at one location or by alleles at different locations in the genome

37
Q

Presence of phenocopies:

A

Individuals who have the disease or trait for reasons that are not primarily genetic even though clinical presentation mimics the more genetic version

38
Q

examples of phenocopies

A

Thalidomide-induced limb malformation vs. genetically-induced

39
Q

it is very difficult to predict whether or not individuals will develop a certain complex disease or trait, even when

A

you may know something about their family history or their alleles at a certain locus.

example: AD and APOE locus

40
Q

The role of non-genetic factors in contributing to variation in complex traits will

A

vary from trait to trait and individual to individual.