Corbett - Patterns of Single Gene Inheritance Flashcards

1
Q

Hemizygous

A

X chromosome mutation in male (not homozygous since only one mutation, but not heterozygote since no second X chromosome)

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2
Q

Allelic Heterogeneity

A

Different mutations in the same gene

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3
Q

Phenotypic Heterogeneity

A

Different mutations in the same gene can produce different phenotypes (allelic heterogeneity where DIFFERENT phenotypes result)

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4
Q

Locus Heterogeneity

A

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)

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5
Q

Autosomal Recessive Disorder

A

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

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6
Q

Autosomal Dominant Disorders

A

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

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7
Q

Incomplete Dominance

A

BB has worse symptoms than Bb. “Red” and “Pink” flowers. Ex: Achondroplasia, Familial Hypercholesterolemia. BB is rare like in Autosomal Dominance

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8
Q

X-linked inheritance (recessive)

A

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

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9
Q

X-linked Dominant

A

Female “carriers” are disease phenotype. NO MALE–>MALE. So more female than male affected (since women get 2 X chromosomes)

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10
Q

Mendelian Exceptions (9)

A

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

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11
Q

Reduced Penetrance

A

Not 100% of people with mutation have phenotypic expression. Can be age dependent

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12
Q

Variable Expressivity

A

Same disease genotype can have variable phenotype (i.e. 100% of bb are affected, but some get itchiness, some get full body rash..)

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13
Q

Sex-Limited traits

A

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.

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14
Q

Mosaicism (Germ line and Somatic)

A

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!

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15
Q

Genomic Imprinting

A

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

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16
Q

Compound Heterozygote

A

Both alleles mutant, but mutations are at separate location in gene