Lecture 25 Flashcards
what are the features of cystic fibrosis?
- autosomal recessive
- clogged and infected airways (prone to bacterial infection)
- digestive problems: pancreatic duct dysfunction, plugged bile ducts, meconium ileus (fetal blockage of intestine)
- bilateral absence of the vas deferens (99% male infertility)
- salty sweat due to salt transport problem
- usually die in ages between 3-5 due to mucus in lungs.
what causes cystic fibrosis?
mutation in CFTR gene resulting in the misfolding of the membrane protein. This protein is located on the lung/air interface and is responsible for allowing chloride ions into the lung lumen. It is also responsible for co-regulating salt transport to the lung lumen (both important for establishing a water gradient). So the misfolding of this protein prevents sodium and chloride from getting onto the lung epithelial cell surface and therefore indirectly prevents water from passively diffusing through aquaporins onto the lung/air interface resulting in dehydrated mucus.
why is there a high carrier frequency associated with CF?
- it confers a heterozygous advantage against typhoid fever since salmonella typhi use the CFTR membrane protein as a receptor to enter intestinal epithelial cells.
what is the most common mutation resulting in CF?
deltaF508 with 70%
describe the CF protein.
- It has 2 transmembrane domains rich in isoleucines and valines.
- It has two nucleotide membrane binding domains (bind ATP) and a regulatory domain which must be phosphorylated for it to work.
- it is also an ion transport protein for chloride made up of six transmembrane helices forming a pore (facilitated diffusion)
who should be tested for cystic fibrosis?
- adults with positive family history of CF
- partners of individuals with CF
- couples currently planning a pregnancy
- couples seeking prenatal care
what is the carrier frequency for caucasians, ashenazi jews, hispanics, and african americans, respectively (high, low, medium)?
- high (1/46)
- high (1/46)
- medium (1/46)
- low (1/60)
what is the major problem with CF in children?
pancreatic deficiency and malnutrition.
how does water move freely through biological membranes despite the fact that it is polar?
aquaporins. however it is not active transport, it is fascilitated diffusion so you need to always create a favorable gradient using SALT on the side you want the water to go to.
what are the treatments for cystic fibrosis?
- antibiotics until bacterial resistance
- physical therapy
- supplementation of digestive enzymes for malnutrition
- hypertonic saline spray directly coats epithelial cells with salty solution which helps draw water out of the cells.
- gene therapy by supplying the normal protein
what are the features of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy?
- X-linked recessive on OMIM 310200
- effects begin at age 3, wheelchair by 8, dead by late teens usually due to respiratory failure or sudden cardiac myopathy.
- no normal muscle fibers.
- no difference among ethnic groups, males almost never reproduce.
- high Creatine phosphokinase (CPK) levels (evidence of muscle damage since they are only present in muscle)
- high rate of new mutations (1/3rd are de novo cases instead of inheritance)
what is Becker Muscular dystrophy?
- rare milder form of DMD
- mutation is on the same gene (OMIM 310200)
- males can reproduce and aren’t wheelchair bound until 20
what is the cause of muscular dystrophy?
mutation at the Xp21 gene which is 2,500,000 bp long (10 times longer than the CF gene). 99% of this gene is made up of introns with only 79 exons. These introns are full of repetitive sequences (necessary for promoter regions that have tissue specific transactivating factors) that are prone to interchromosomal deletions during meiosis and intrachromsomal recombination, leading to sequence deletion.
what is the protein dystrophin responsible for?
- its an intracellular structural submembrane protein that lives inside the cell but close to the cell membrane.
- it cushions the movement of muscles and helps prevent shearing of the fibers.
- also associates with cytoskeleton proteins inside the cell, proteins on sarcolemma, and laminin and collagens, hooking them all together and providing structure.
what happens if you lack laminin?
you get congenital muscular dystrophy