cystic fibrosis Flashcards
What is the inheritance pattern for CF?
autosomal recessive
What is the general mutation in CF?
inactivating mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene
What is the CFTR actually? Where is it found?
a chloride ion channel found on the apical surface of epithelial cells lining airways, pancreatic ducts, intestine and other tissues
Although CF can affect multiple organs, where are the most serious consequences?
pulmonary
What causes death in 90% of CF patients?
progressive lung disease
What are some non-pulmonary effects of CF?
pancreatic enzyme insufficiency
CF-related diabetes
malabsorption in the intestines
male infertility
What is the median survival for CF today?
37.4 years - a huge improvement form the past where it was largely a pediatric disease only (now almost half are adults)
The CFTR gene is found on what chromosome?
the long arm of chromosome 7
What ethnic group has the highest incidence of CF?
caucasians - especially northern european caucasians (1:2500)
How many mutations have been identified for CF? Why is this not bad news?
1900!
actually not bad news because only 5 mutation are found in over 1% of cases and only 160 mutations account for over 95% of cases
What is class 1 of CFTR mutations?
class 1 occurs when no protein is produced due to a nonsense mutation causing a stop codon
What is the example allele for class 1? What percentage?
G542X - (x for stop)
5% of CF alleles
What is class 2?
defective protein folding activates ER quality control, leading to degradation of the protein
What is the example allelef or class 2? What percentage?
F508del (deletion at 508)
THIS IS THE MOST COMMON - 70% of alleles and 90% of people who have CF have at least 1 allele like this
What is class 3?
defective gating or regulation of channel opening
What’s the example of class 3? Percentage?
G5510D
4%
What’s class 4?
defective in ion transport
What is class 5?
normal CFTR protein, but decreased amounts
What are the “severe” mutations and what are the “less severe” mutations?
severe = 1, 2, and 3 (the most common unfortunately)
less severe = 4 and 5
How do the severe and less severe mutations differ in terms of diagnosis, % CFTR function, extrapulmonary effects and survival?
severe: less than 1% of CFTR function, diagnosed first year, median survival 37.4, pancreatic insufficient and at risk for CF-related diabetes and liver disease
less severe: about 5% of CFTR function, may have later presentaion, survival to about 50 yrs, pancreatic sufficient and less risk for other effects
Describe the structure of the CFTR?
its membrane spanning domain forms a pore for the chloride ion channel
there are two nucleotide binding domains and an T domain that provide regulatory sites that promote opening of te channel (NBD binds ATP and R has phosphorylation sites for PKA)