Genetic diseases Flashcards
Describe the effect each mutation has on gene activity?
- Neural/silent
- Amorphic
- Hypomorphic
- Hypermorphic
- Neomorphic
What is epistasis?
- One gene affects the expression of another
- Compare Penetrance and expressivity.
- Why do we get same mutated gene but different phenotypes?
Penetrance is the proportion of individuals in a group with a given genotype that show the expected phenotype.
Expressivity is the degree to which a genotype is expressed in an individual.
What does fitness mean in terms of penetrance?
- Fitness: extent to which mutant allele carrying individuals produce off-spring
relative to those who do not carry a mutant allele
Why do 10% of people with retinoblastoma mutation never develop tumour?
- Reduced penetrance
The estimated penetrance of familial retinoblastoma is approximately 90%. If a man with familial retinoblastoma and mates with a woman who does not have the retinoblastoma mutation, what is the risk that their offspring will develop retinoblastoma?
The probability that the offspring will inherit the susceptibility allele is 0.50, as familial retinoblastoma is autosomal dominant.
* However, we need to consider the penetrance of the disorder.
* The probability of inheriting the disease causing allele (0.50) and expressing the phenotype (0.90) is given by multiplying the probabilities
* 0.50 x 0.90 = 0.45
What is multifactorial inheritance?
- Interaction of multiple genes (polygenic) with the exogenous (environmental) factors
- once you pass the threshold for disease you will get it - all or nothing
- if you are susceptible for disease/have specific risk factors the threshold is pushed back
How are autosomal dominant conditions inherited?
- If 50% of product (from non-mutant allele) is not enough for a cell/tissue to function – loss-of- function mutation in the gene produces a dominantly inherited phenotype.
Most dominantly inherited phenotypes are….
- Semi-dominant
- Individuals with 2 mutant alleles (homozygous) affected more severely than those with 1 mutant allele (heterozygous)
- Homozygous individuals: rare
In autosomal dominant inheritance what would you expect to see on a pedigree? (4)
- Successive generations affected – vertical transmission
- Males and females affected equally and with equal severity
- Males and females can transmit the mutant allele (1/2 Chance of inheritance)
- Affected individuals have affected parent
What is semi-dominance?
- Partially dominant trait
- Neither allele is completely dominant over the other, and the heterozygous individual exhibits a phenotype that falls somewhere between the two homozygous extremes.
- The phenotype of a heterozygote is distinct to (less severe?) the phenotypes of the homozygote phenotypes.
A male who has achondroplasia has children with a phenotypically normal female. If they have four children, what is the probability that:
a) None of their children will be affected with the disorder?
b) The probability that all four children will be affected?
- Autosomal dominant
- Affected homozygotes die early in life
- Therefore male parent is heterozygous and has 50% chance of passing on the mutant allele to each offspring.
a) Probability all four are unaffected (1/2)4 = 1/16 b) Probability all four are unaffected (1/2)4 = 1/16
What is codominance ?
Two alleles are expressed separately to give different traits in an individual
A man has neurofibromatosis type 1. His mother also has this condition.
a) What is the probability that his sister also has this disease?
b) In the absence of knowledge of his sisters phenotype, what is the probability that his sister’s daughter has neurofibromatosis type 1?
Mother has neurofibromatosis type 1, can be assumed to be heterozygous (homozygotes are rare and indeed none have been reported).
* The probability her daughter inherits the disease-causing allele is 1⁄2.
* The probability the sister transmits the disease-causing allele to her daughter is 1⁄2.
* The probability of both events occur is 1⁄2 x 1⁄2 = 1⁄4
* If we knew that they mans sister was affected, the probability that his sisters daughter is affected would be 1⁄2
What is dominant negative gene action?
- Occurs in diseases involving proteins forming oligomeric or polymeric complexes (proteins with more than 1 subunit)
- A mutant allele in a gene gives rise to a structurally abnormal protein, that interferes with the function of the normal allele in heterozygotes