Genetic disorders and Neoplasia Flashcards

1
Q

Autosomal dominant and recessive diseases have opposing features of age of onset, which one is which?

A

Dominant-Occurs later in life usually

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2
Q

Which disorders are dominant?

A

BAMN

Brugada, Achondroplasia, Marfan syndrome, and Neurofibromatosis

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3
Q

What is Brugada Syndrome due to?

A

Due to defect in gene that codes for Na, K, or Ca channels in the heart

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4
Q

What is often the first symptom of someone who has Brugadas?

A

Sudden cardiac death with structurally normal hearts

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5
Q

What causes development of Achondroplasia?

A

A mutation in the gene for FGF receptor 3

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6
Q

80% of individuals with achodroplasia have parents of average height, meaning most cases result from ___ mutations.

A

De novo

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7
Q

What is the paternal age effect?

A

New, sporadic dominant mutations occurring with advanced paternal age.

Over the age of 40 has an increase risk of passing on a mendelian condition, primarily autosomal dominant ones that were not present in either parent

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8
Q

What causes Marfan syndrome?

A

Dysfunction in a gene that codes for fibrillin 1 needed for production of elastic fibers

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9
Q

What are the pleiotropic effects observed in Marfans syndrome?

A

Disproportionately tall stature, ocular changes, sever myopia, retinal detachments, dislocations of the lenses, hyperextensible skin, bruising easily, poor wound healing

Most serious is dilation of the aortic root, leading to rupture and sudden death

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10
Q

What is the genetic defect in Neurofibromatosis?

A

Defect in a tumor suppressor gene involved in cell division and growth, causing tumor formation by Schwann cells

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11
Q

What are the two neurofibromatosis and their manifestations?

A

NF-1- learning disabilities, ADD, speech abnormalities

NF-2- Absence or minimal cutaneous lesions, progressive deafness and bilateral acoustic neuromas

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12
Q

What do autosomal recessive mutations often lead to?

A

Loss of enzyme function (inborn errors of metabolism)

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13
Q

What are the two characteristics of autosomal recessive disorders that distinguish it from a dominant disorder?

A

AR results in early onset of disease and uniform symptomology

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14
Q

What are the four autosomal recessive disorders we discuss?

A

PaTT

Phenyketonuria, Tay Sachs disease, A1 antitrypsin deficiency, Thalassemias

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15
Q

What is the genetic defect in phenylketonuria?

A

Most commonly lack of phenyalanine hydroxylase, which converts phenyalanine to tyrosine. Excess Phenylalanine is toxic to the brain

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16
Q

What are manifestations of PKU? If left untreated?

A

Mental retardation, microcephaly, seizures, decrease pigmentation
Post natal growth restrictions, intellectual disability, recurrent seizures

17
Q

What deficiency causes Tay Sachs Disease?

A

Hexominidase A, which breaks down GM2 ganglioside

It ends up accumulating in the lysosomes in this disease when not broken down

18
Q

What are the manifestations of Tay Sachs Disease?

A

Weakness, muscle flaccidity, decreased attentivenessk blindness

19
Q

What does the progression of Tay Sachs Disease look like?

A

Normal at birth, symptoms at 3-6 months, death at 4-5

20
Q

What does alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency cause?

A

Alveolar damage due to increased elastic fiber destruction and emphysema

21
Q

What can also cause similar symptoms as a1 antitrypsin disease?

A

Smoking

22
Q

What does Thalassemias result from?

A

Mutations causing deficient synthesis of alpha or beta globin chain of hemoglobin and compensation by increasing the unaffected chain

23
Q

What does alpha thalassemias cause?

A

Doesnt really say, but its not as bad as Beta thalassemia

24
Q

What does beta thalassemia cause?

A

Heinz bodies produced r/t increase alpha chains. The heinz bodies damage the cell and cause lysis

25
Q

What are the two different names of beta thalassemia?

A

Minor-1 mutations

Major/Cooleys Anemia- 2 Mutations

26
Q

What are the two X linked inherited disorders we discussed?

A

Chronic granulomatous disease and G6PD

27
Q

What is the most common inherited enzyme deficiency?

A

G6PD, especially common in African, Middle easter, or south asian decent

28
Q

What can G6PD lead to?

A

Acute hemolysis when exposed to oxidative stressors like infection or those deadly fava beans

29
Q

What do mitochondrial disorders commonly relate to given their etiology?

A

Impaired protein synthesis resulting in many different forms of myopathy

30
Q

What causes down syndrome?

A

Aneuploidy, extra chromosomes
Specifically, it most commonly caused by nondisjunction error in meiosis but can also be due to a translocation event (Robersonian Chromosome)

31
Q

What is Klinefelter a result of?

A

Extra X, or more, chromosome due to nondisjunction

32
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of Klinefelter?

A

Increased risk for low bone density, CV and immunological diseases, and psych disorders

It all depends on how many extra X chromosomes there are

33
Q

What is Turner Syndrome due to?

A

45 chromosomes

34
Q

What are Turner Syndromes signs and symptoms?

A

Htn, obesity, dyslipidemia, impaired glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, autoimmune disease, CV diseases, hepatic dysfunctions,

35
Q

What is the TMB?

A

Tumor Mutational Burden

Cancer cells with a higher TMB may be easier to target due to increased neoantigens

36
Q

What are the two viruses mentioned that can promote tumorigenesis?

A

HCV, HPV