9 10 Genetic Diseases-Table 1 Flashcards

1
Q

what is incomplete peneterance

A

there is a diminished probability of having the phenotype despite the fact that the genotype is present. i.e. some with the dominant gene don’t get the disease.

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2
Q

what is age-dependent penetrance

A

think of inherited breast and colon cancer or Huntington disease.

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3
Q

what is variable expression?

A

the expression of dominant gene in a widely varied way.

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4
Q

what is pleiotrophy

A

a single disease causing mutations affect mutliple organs or parts of the bodies.

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5
Q

what is it called when the eye reflects as white instead of red.

A

luekocoria

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6
Q

what would a leukocoria indicate?

A

retinoblastoma

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7
Q

Describe Retinoblastoma

A

cancer of the eye, it is autosomal dominant with incomplete penetrance, 1/20,000 children, 5% of childhood blindness, most common eye tumor for children, almost always onset before six years of age.

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8
Q

what is unique about the pedigree for a retino blastoma

A

it is a dominant disorder, but can exhibit obligate carriers (one who must have the genotype) but never develops the phenotype! i.e. incomplete penetrance.

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9
Q

how do we estimate penetrance?

A

calculate the proportion of obligat carriers who deveop the disease (90%) for retinoblastoma

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10
Q

what is the prob. of having retino blastoma with a known carrier parent and a 90% penetrance?

A

45% (use the multiplicatin rule for probability)

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11
Q

what is the difference between the hereditary and non-hereditary presentation of retinoblastoma?

A

40/60 split with sporadic dominating. Soradic: unilateral, unifocal tumor. Hereditary cases: usually bilateral, multifocal tumors.

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12
Q

What is the two hit model?

A

there must be a “hit” on both of the coppies of the locus (on both of the matching chromosomes) before a cancer will develop

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13
Q

why is retinoblastoma such a random event even when the gene for it is inherited?

A

because there is a need for a second hit or a spontaneious mutaiton even for those that carry the mutation on one of the coppies of the genes.

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14
Q

what type of gene fits the two hit model?

A

these genes are tumor suppressors and the first was RB1

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15
Q

what is the fundtion of pRb?

A

pRb is a “brake” on E2F which is a promotor for cell replication. CDK4 de-activates pRb and cyclin D would activate CDK4: therefore activate CDK4 and de-activate pRB and allow E2F to promote cell division.

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16
Q

how can the cell inactivate pRb?

A

phosphorylation by cyclin dependent kinases (CDK4) (normal); loss of function mutation of both copies of rB1 or by papilloma virus E7 oncoprotein in cervical cancer cases.

17
Q

why is Rb so important?

A

it is found to be mutated in almost all cancers! i.e loss of pRb activity increases cell division and promotes tumor formation.

18
Q

if you have retinoblastoma, you are worried about further cacner forming, why?

A

because the “hit” on pRb is in all of the cells of someone who inherieted the pRb mutation so they are at risk of getting a second “hit” in other cells (esp. in bone cancer)

19
Q

what are some of the symptoms of Huntington disease?

A

progressive loss of motor control (chorea); Dementia; Depression, psychosis; 15-year onset.

20
Q

how does huntington disease present autosomal dominant in an unusual way?

A

it is delayed age of onset. It won’t show up in some cases until very late in life.

21
Q

why might affected fathers that pass on the huntington disease result in children with quicker onset of the disease?

A

there are more mutations in the germ cells of men and therefore more CAG repeats passed on and the children develop the diseasse faster.

22
Q

what is the genetic cause of Hintington?

A

CAG repeat number in the first exon (40 or more and you are at risk for huntington disease)

23
Q

what is the range in the number of CAG repeats compared to the development of huntington

A

less than 26 normal, 27-35 is intermediate (these are both unafected ranges); 36-39 are reduced penetrance; more than 40 are full penetrance.

24
Q

what is the relationship between the number of CAG repeates in the huntington gene and age of onset

A

inversly related. the more repeates the younger the age of onset

25
Q

what causes huntingtons after the gene is had?

A

polyglutamine aggregation in the cell. (it is a gain in function mutation). This leads to poly ubiquitinaion and to break down by a proteasome. Also implicated is brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDnF) mutations that will cause aggregates and breakdown trafficking and cell signalling in a neuron.

26
Q

what are some developing therapies for huntington?

A

agenst that prevent the polyglutamin aggregation, and RNA interference (RNAi) blocks expression of mutant HD gene.

27
Q

what is neurofibromin

A

it is a disease of the nerve sheaths that can present as simply cafe a lait spots or as small neurofibromatosis or as numerous ones oor as lisch nodules (in the eyes) or as large plexiform tumors. It has varied expression!

28
Q

What is the microbilogical cause of neurofibromin?

A

neurofibromin converts active ras to inactive ras. Therefore if there is mutated neurofibromin gene then Ras is over-expressed. therefore cell growth!

29
Q

what affects variable expression?

A

environmental variation; Allelic heterogeneity (different mutations at the locus) modifier loci

30
Q

what is marfan syndrome?

A

Skeletal defects; hyperextensibile joints and arachnodactyly; ocular defects (stabismus where the eyes don’t center together); COPD; Cardiovascular defects (mitral valve prolapse, aortic dilation)

31
Q

what are some physical signs of arachnodactyly

A

steinberg sign (where thumbs can reach accross the palms and touch); walker-murdoch (wrist sign) where the thumb and pinky can encircle the wrist

32
Q

what cuases marfan?

A

fibrillin gene (most cases), expressed in: suspensory ligament of the eye; periosteum; aorta! this leads to very stretchy fibers. Also fibrillin is a molecular sponge for TFGbeta, therefore a mutation in fibrillin will allow an over expression of TFGbeta.

33
Q

what is a dominant negative effect?

A

the one mutated form of the protein overides the normal function of the normal gene: in fibrilin the bad fibers polymerize with the good and poison the fibers

34
Q

how do you treat marfan’s syndrome

A

Losartan reduces dilation of the aortic valve by binding to the TGFbeta and effectively doing the job of fibrilin as far as TGFbeta absorption and binding.