GENETICS - wk 2 Flashcards

1
Q

retinoblastoma

A
  • Commonest childhood eye tumour
  • 1 in 15,000 children
  • 3rd most common childhood cancer
  • 18 mnths onset
  • 60% present with leukonia – white pupil (in camera flash)
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2
Q

2 hit hypothesis in relation to retinoblastoma

A
  • To explain hereditary retinoblastoma
  • Discovered Because there are 2 groups of children getting it…
    o Those getting it vv early on and both eyes affected
     These children had a germline copy of the damaged gene present in all cells of the body, since only in one homolog it isn’t sufficient to cause disease, but a second hit leads to full blown disease
     So their chances are greater than a non-carrier who would need to get ‘2 hits’ to get the cancer
    o Those getting it when older only one eye affected
     These children don’t have the germline copy
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3
Q

tumour supressor genes

A
  • Control cell growth and differentiation
  • Function as ‘cellular recessives’
  • Follow the 2-hit hypothesis
    o So both alleles for these genes must be affected for the phenotype to be negatively affected

You can inherit the first hit mutation autosomal dominantly
- But in any cell the second one must be faulty to cause cancer

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4
Q

genetic testing in complex genetic disorders - gene association studies

A
  • More than one gene affected
  • May not be genes may be regulatory
  • Use Gene Association Studies
    o Test many individuals with the gene you’re interested along with a control group of people that don’t have a specific gene
    o If association between gene and disease or trait is present … a particular allele, genotype or haplotype of a polymorphism will be seen more often than expected by chance in an individual carrying the trait
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5
Q

testing for mendelian disease - what do we screen for

A

aka single gene disorders

POPULATION SCREENING
-	Neonatal screening for genetic mendelian disorders
o	Blood test (heel prick) at day 7
-	Screened for…
o	Phenylketonuria
	Clinically silent in first months
	Eczema
	Hypopigmentation
	Severe developmental delay
	‘mousey’ smell to urine
o	Congenital hypothyroidism
o	Cystic fibrosis
o	Medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency
o	Sickle cell disorder
o	Hearing loss
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6
Q

what features make screening for a genetic disorder worth it

A
  • well-defined disorder
  • known incidence in a certain population
  • significant morbidity or mortality
  • effective treatment available
  • period before onset during which intervention improves outcome
  • ethical, safe, simple and robust screening test
  • cost-effective
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7
Q

pre-symptomatic genetic testing

A

Does not necessarily require DNA test
- Clinical examination for discriminative phenotypes
- Investigation
- Family history changes prior risk
If done for medical reasons
- Should result in a preventative intervention
- Family implications need to be considered
Testing of children is appropriate if intervention starts in childhood

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8
Q

what are the 2 reasons for presymptomatic genetic testing and what are the pros and cons of the later

A

1- Medical reasons – to make sure interventions occur
2- Non-medical reasons – for adult-onset neurological disorders normally
- cons
o no medical benefit
o side-effect unknown (but inc. risk of suicide)
o many people request test to confirm they do not have the condition
o insurance/ mortgage problems
- pros
o removes uncertainty
o clarifies reproductive risk
o career/ lifestyle choices

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9
Q

what are the rules/issues for getting a non-medical presymp. genetic test

A
  • performed only in specialist units
  • restricted to adults
  • obligate carriers are a problem (eg if child is positive then parent will know they are pos too)
  • may be done for reproductive reasons
  • should become rarer (due to better treatment in future)
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10
Q

de-novo mutation, distribution

A
  • very common
  • increase with paternal and maternal age
    o both aged 20 1 in 377, both aged 45 1 in 168
  • only affect genotype if the genetic change is in a functional area of the protein usually leading to loss of function
  • severe but not as clinically distinctive
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11
Q

genomic imprinting definition and description

A

Differences in gene expression depending on whether a gene is maternally or paternally inherited

  • specific chromosomal regions contain imprinted genes
  • such regions usually contain both maternally and paternally imprinted genes
  • normal cellular process
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12
Q

whats the significance of hemizygosity

A

means loss of one of the parents contributions/ alleles

  • accounts for only a small number of genes expressed
  • importance?
    o Many developmental genes are imprinted
    o Disruption of imprinting is implicated in several well-known genetic disorders and many cancers
  • Chromosome that was deleted in Angelman case was derived from mother
  • In Prader-Willi case derived from father
  • Loss of heterozygosity e.g. loss of one of the parents contribution
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13
Q

what are the 3 mechanisms behind loss of imprinting - and what is trisomic rescue

A

1- Chromosome deletion of maternal chromosome
2- Methylation abnormality
3- Uniparental disomy
o When both chromosomes are form the same parent as there would have been trisomy but the maternal chromosome has been kicked out via trisomic rescue
o Trisomic rescue is random so no guarantee it kicks out one of the extra paternal chromosomes

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14
Q

mitochondrial DNA

A
  • only organelle with it’s own DNA
  • 16.559 base pairs
  • Many copies in a cell, dependant on energy requirement of cell/tissue
  • Contains important genes for mitochondrial metabolism and ribosomal RNA
  • Maternally inherited
  • High rate of mutations
    o Point mutations and deletions occur
  • Double stranded, ring structure, no introns
  • Genes are tightly packed together
  • Few or no non-coding nucleotides between genes
  • Approx. 92% of mitochondrial genome has coding function
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15
Q

respiratory chain disorders what does it effect and how to diagnose

A

aka mitochondrial disease

  • Disorder of high energy tissues
  • Eg heart problems, brain problems, muscle problems, eye problems etc

Diagnose via

  • Serum lactate > raised
  • Mitochondrial DNA mutation > blood analysis
  • Muscle biopsy
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16
Q

whats the inheritance pattern of mitochondrial disease

A
  • Similar to x-linked
  • No male-to-male transmission
  • Maternal inheritance only if affected gene is from mitochondrial DNA
  • Mitochondrial DNA does not code for all mitochondrial protein
  • If mitochondrial protein is coded from genomic DNA then follows a mandelian pattern of inheritance
17
Q

what are some possible phenotypes of mitochondrial mutations

A
  • Pearson syndrome
  • kearns sayre syndrome
  • myopathy
  • ataxia
  • cardiomyopathy’s
  • leighs encephalopathy
18
Q

heteoplasmy definition and 2 different mechanisms

A

Different daughter cells contain different proportions of mutant mitochondria

Can happen at 2 levels
- At the oocyte when cells are dividing
o So, different daughter cells have different distributions of the mutated DNA
- Or at tissue level
o So when cell is dividing if the mutated DNA contributes to high energy tissues then will be more highly affected than if it contribute to different tissues

19
Q

triplet repeat expansions description and other name for it

A

Another name for these is DYNAMIC MUTATIONS
- This is because these mutations are still evolving through generations
- Not stably inherited
- Mutations are (usually) increasing in size with successive generations
- Has a threshold effect
- Exhibit a relationship between severity and copy number
o Explains phenomenon of anticipation (more severe in succeeding generations)

20
Q

state the gender bias of triplet repeat expansions in 2 disorders

A
  • Expansions of repeats usually has gender bias
    o Eg. HD expansion when transmitted from paternal line
    o Fragile X – expansion transmitted from maternal line
  • Accounts for over 40 neurological, neuromuscular and neurodegenerative disorders
21
Q

myotonic dystrophy explanation and genetic underpinning

A
  • Emotionless faces
  • They can’t shake your hands
  • CTG trinucleotide repeat in 3’ UTR of myotonic dystrophy gene
  • Normally 5-27 copies of repeat
  • Disease alleles 50-2000 repeats
  • Repeat expands in males or female transmission
    o But sudden increase in repeats from maternal transmission
  • Disease shows anticipation
22
Q

digenic inheritance

A
  • First came to light with sensorineural deafness
  • > 100 genes involved
  • Usually conforms to mendelian patterns of inheritance
  • However, a proportion of proportion of patients with deafness, were double heterozygotes for known deafness genes
    o Ie no hearing deficit were found in patients who were only carriers of a mutation in a single locus but deafness occurred where patients were carriers of mutations in 2 gene loci
23
Q

contiguous gene deletion syndrome definition

A

A syndrome caused by a microdeletion that spans two or more genes along a chromosome

24
Q

subtelomeric chromosomal rearrangements - why telomeres?

A

Why focus on telomeres?
- Majority of translocations involve chromosome ends (shared telomere-associated repeats)
- Gene rich adjacent regions (rearrangements likely to have phenotypic consequences)
Moderate-severe MR
- For sporadic cases (7%)
- For familial cases (25%)

25
Q

mosaicism definition and 2 variations

A

When an individual is made up of populations of cells with different genetic constitutions
Can be mosaic for…
- Chromosomal aneuploidy
- Molecular mutations

26
Q

somatic mosaicism in the average person

A

All cells suffer mutations as they divide
- At meiosis and at mitosis
- Approximately 10^6 per gene per cell divisions
Given the numbers of cell sin the body
- Everybody will have some cells which has a mutation of some sort
Repair Mechanisms Exist
- Can give rise to reversion

27
Q

pathological mosaicism - when it becomes clinically important and signs of it in patients

A

May become clinically important…

  • If mutant cells have tendency to grow and replace normal cells (cancer cells)
  • If the mutation arose early in embryonic development, so becomes a large proportion of the whole body
  • If the mutation occurred in the germ line

Signs of mosaicism…

  • Differential growth patterns eg one leg more than another
  • Mutations in the skin
  • Some conditions only exist as a mosaic if the pure line is lethal – trisomy 14, tetrasomy 12
28
Q

gonadal mosaicism - common in what diseases and what does it lead to in terms of testing

A
  • Commoner in some diseases
    o Duchenne muscular dystrophy
    o Osteogenesis imperfecta
  • Can offer pre-natal diagnosis for a second child, even when parents are unaffected
  • Causes recurrence risk for fatal dominant conditions