non-mendelian inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

<p>define incomplete penetrance</p>

A

<p>mutations present in everyone, not everyone appears to have the disease
E.g. familial breast cancer

gene modifier + environmental trigger = pathogenesis</p>

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2
Q

<p>sporadic cases occur due to</p>

A

<p>recurrent de novo mutation</p>

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3
Q

<p>imprinting occurs due to</p>

A

<p>inheritance of variant from appropriate parent
genes expressed from only one chromosome
expression is determined by the parent that contributed the gene - i.e. what disease you get depends on which chromosome was doing the expressing</p>

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4
Q

<p>anticipation</p>

A

<p>triplet repeat expansion</p>

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5
Q

<p>mitochondrial disease occurs due to</p>

A

<p>maternal inheritance</p>

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6
Q

<p>multigenic inheritance occurs due to</p>

A

<p>multiple genes of modest risk</p>

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7
Q

<p>mitochondrial inheritance</p>

A

<p>- have their own genome

- smaller than nu genome
- 93% coding
- maternal inheritance
- polyploidy
- higher natural mutation rate</p>

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8
Q

<p>human mitochondrial DNA</p>

A

<p>circular shape rather than long and thin like nu DNA</p>

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9
Q

<p>maternal inheritance</p>

A

<p>- can only be passed on from the mum

- only get mitochondria from mother as they are present in the egg cell only
- if the mother has mutant mitochondrial DNA it is inevitable that her offspring will also inherit it
- however the affected son of the mother won't pass it on</p>

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10
Q

<p>heteroplasmy</p>

A

<p>Heteroplasmy is the presence of more than one type of organellar genome (mitochondrial DNA or plastid DNA) within a cell or individual. It is an important factor in considering the severity of mitochondrial diseases.</p>

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11
Q

<p>polyploidy</p>

A

<p>Polyploidy is the state of a cell or organism having more than two paired (homologous) sets of chromosomes.

homoplasmy - all mitochondiral DNA is identical
heteroplasmy - mixture of 2 populations

thresehold level of MtDNA mutants before disease</p>

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12
Q

<p>why is mitochondrial genome a mutational hotspot</p>

A

<p>- lacks efficient DNA repair system

- lack protective proteins
- associated with inner mitochondrial membrane - production of oxygen radicals during oxidative phosphorylation</p>

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13
Q

<p>mitochondrial DNA mutations</p>

A

<p>affecting protein synth

| mutations in protein coding genes</p>

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14
Q

<p>mitochondrial protein synthesis mutations</p>

A
<p>single deletions (up to 5-9kb, one or more tRNA genes)
point mutations (rRNA/tRNA genes)

decreased MtDNA protein synth
decrease respiratory chain complexes</p>

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15
Q

<p>examples of mitochondrial disease</p>

A

<p>LHON

| MELAS</p>

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16
Q

<p>LHON</p>

A
<p>leber hereditary optic neuropathy
rapid, bilateral central vision loss
optic nerve damage 
onset 2nd/3rd decade
treatable</p>
17
Q

<p>MELAS</p>

A

<p>lactic acid build up causes muscle weakness, pain, headaches, vomiting, hearing loss, heart and kidney problems, diabetes and hormonal imbalance
stroke like episodes under 40, progressive brain damage</p>

18
Q

<p>evidence for imprinting</p>

A

<p>nuclear transplantation studies
uniparental diploidy in humans (two copies of the same gamete)
uniparental disomy (one chromosome is doubled up i.e. both are inherited from the same parent)</p>

19
Q

<p>gynogenote</p>

A

<p>two maternal genomes
rarely leads to the development of new organism
normal embryo but doesn't grow properly due to poor membrane and placenta development

mass of embyronic tissues, ovarian teratoma</p>

20
Q

<p>androgenote</p>

A

<p>two parental genomes
abnormal embryo but normal membrane and placenta development

mass of placental structure, hydatidiform mole, miscarriage</p>

21
Q

<p>human models of imprinted disease</p>

A

<p>angelman syndrome
Prader-Willi syndrome
Beckwith-Weidemann syndrome</p>

22
Q

<p>angelman syndrome</p>

A

<p>inappropriate laughter
epilepsy
awkward gait
severe mental retardation</p>

23
Q

<p>Prader-Willi syndrome</p>

A

<p>hypotonia at birth - decreased muscle tone
short stature
insatiable appetite (marked obesity)
mild-moderate mental retardation</p>

24
Q

<p>Beckwith-Weidermann syndrome</p>

A

<p>complex behavioural phenotypes

| cancer</p>

25
Q

<p>genetic mechanisms in AS and PWS</p>

A

Deletion, uniparental disomy, imprinting, point mutations

Deletion: chromosome 15q11-13, about 70% of AS and PWS cases, deletion of maternal chromosome (AS), deletion of paternal chromosome (PWS)

Uniparental disomy: paternal UPD - AS (lacking maternal chromosome 15, about 1-2% of cases), maternal UPD - PWS (lacking paternal chromosome 15, about 25-30% of cases)

Imprinting defect: AS - about 2-4% of cases, maternal chr has paternal imprint, maternal genes silenced. PWS - about 1-3% of cases, paternal chr has maternal imprint, paternal genes silenced

Point mutations: AS - UBE3A gene, ubiquitin ligase, expressed in brain (maternal chromosome only), about 10% of cases. PWS: not seen

26
Q

molecular defects in PWS and AS

A
AS: 
maternal deletion - 70%
paternal UPD - 1-2%
imprinting defect - 2-4%
UBE3A mutation - 10%

PWS:
paternal deletion - 70%
maternal UPD - 25-30%
imprinting deect - 1-3%

two different syndromes but same chromosomal region

27
Q

polygenic inheritance

A

common in common diseases
CVD, non-mendelian familial breast cancer and colon cancer

combination of multiple polymorphisms that individually have a small effect Environmental contribution important
Risk to offspring &laquo_space;mendelian disease
Application in screening and treatment risk
Stratification coming

28
Q

mechanism of genomic imprinting

A
  • Precise mechanism is unclear
  • Involves multistep process
  • First: Chromosome is marked, Parental origin, Occurs in the zygote prior to fusion of the 2 gametes
  • Second: Parent of origin mark must be stably maintained
  • Third: Parent of origin mark must be identified by transcriptional machinery, Monoallelic expression (somatic cells)
  • Finally: Specific to germ cells, Mark must be erased and reset
29
Q

DNMT and imprinting

A
  • Given semiconservative replication of DNA
  • Once DNA is methylated it stays methylated
    Provides mechanism for stably maintaining an imprinted gene
30
Q

methylation and its impact of transcription patterns

A
  • Block expression directly: interfering with transcriptional activator complexes
  • Block expression indirectly: recruiting factors that induce chromatin structures
    Good model - H19/IGF2 locus
31
Q

features of ICRs

A
  • Regulate other imprinted genes in the same region
  • Differential DNA methylation established in germline and maintained in somatic cells
  • Differential histone modification
    Act as chromatin insulators
32
Q

define penetrance

A

the proportion of individuals carrying a particular variant (or allele) of a gene (the genotype) that also express an associated trait (the phenotype).