Corbett - Patterns of Single Gene Inheritance Flashcards
Hemizygous
X chromosome mutation in male (not homozygous since only one mutation, but not heterozygote since no second X chromosome)
Allelic Heterogeneity
Different mutations in the same gene
Phenotypic Heterogeneity
Different mutations in the same gene can produce different phenotypes (allelic heterogeneity where DIFFERENT phenotypes result)
Locus Heterogeneity
Mutations at DIFFERENT locii produce the SAME phenotype (i.e. mutation in K+ regulation gene or Na+ regulation gene can both cause symptoms of inhibited Na+/K+ channels)
Autosomal Recessive Disorder
Must be bb, can be compound heterozygote. Often reduce/eliminate function of gene product, rare. Chance of bb is 1/4, chance of carrier Bb is 2/4. Chance of unaffected carrier is 2/3.
Increased risk: Carrier frequency, consanguinity, inbreeding.
Identifying pedigree: Parents unaffected, males=females, 1/4 kids ratio, yes male–>male transmission, increased risk due to inbreeding
exs: Cystic Fibrosis, Tay-Sachs, Sickle Cell
Autosomal Dominant Disorders
50% mendelian disorders, high incidence. Since BB is rare, Bb is diseased, bb is fine, Bb x bb = 1/2 affected risk. No carriers since Bb is affected.
Key to pedigree: MUST have affected parents, male = female, yes male–>male transmission, normal kids have normal kids
Incomplete Dominance
BB has worse symptoms than Bb. “Red” and “Pink” flowers. Ex: Achondroplasia, Familial Hypercholesterolemia. BB is rare like in Autosomal Dominance
X-linked inheritance (recessive)
If mom carrier, 1/2 risk of son symptoms,1/2 risk of daughters being carrier. If dad is carrier, all daughters are carriers, all sons are unaffected.
Pedigree: NO MALE–>MALE. Almost exclusively males affected. Chance of women being affected despite XnXs due to somatic mosaicism, unbalanced X-inactivation. Can “skip generations” due to female carriers.
Ex: Duchene Muscular Dystrophy
X-linked Dominant
Female “carriers” are disease phenotype. NO MALE–>MALE. So more female than male affected (since women get 2 X chromosomes)
Mendelian Exceptions (9)
1) Penetrance
2) Expressivity
3) Sex-limited
4) Germ line mosaicism
5) Genetic Imprinting
6) New Mutations
7) Misattributed Paternity
8) Mitochondrial Inheritance
9) Trinucleotide Expansion
Reduced Penetrance
Not 100% of people with mutation have phenotypic expression. Can be age dependent
Variable Expressivity
Same disease genotype can have variable phenotype (i.e. 100% of bb are affected, but some get itchiness, some get full body rash..)
Sex-Limited traits
Autosomal mutation, occurs in both sexes, but only one sex expresses phenotype, due to anatomical/physical differences
Pedigree: can see affected kids from unaffected parents, YES MALE–>MALE so excludes X-linked
Ex: Male-limited precocious puberty is AD mutation in luteinizing hormone receptor gene, only seen in males. Hemachromatosis, pregnant women have better iron reduction so see symptoms more in men.
Mosaicism (Germ line and Somatic)
Somatic: early developmental mutation causes disease phenotype in somatic tissue
Germline: “ + affects gametes, so see diseased kids from healthy parents who aren’t even carriers!
Genomic Imprinting
Can cause AR disease in Bb despite heterozygosity, or no AD disease in Bb despite B gene. Imprinting reverses after one generation, so can have diseased grandma–>unaffected son–>diseased kid, all Bb. Ex: Prader-Willi vs. Angelman