Mendelian Inheritance of Human Disease Flashcards
Describe the basic structural hierarchy of a chromosome
- Chromosome = linear DNA molecule
- Gene = length of DNA which encodes a particular protein
- Genes are arranged along Ch in a linear order-each has a precise position = locus
- Alternative forms of a gene = allele
- Each Ch bears only a single allele at a given locus
Describe the basic numerical structure fo human chromosomes
• Human = 46 chromosomes = 2 X 23 homologous pairs
• In females = 2x22 pairs and XX
• In males = 2x22 pairs and XY
• One member of each pair comes from the father, the other from the mother
• Member of each pair has same genes in the same order, but at at any one locus they may have either:
the same genetic variants (alleles) = homozygous or different alleles = heterozygous
What is a genetic disease and give some examples of the causes
One caused by a change in the genes Chromosome aneuploidies (extra or missing chromosome) More subtle chromosome abnormality Extra piece of chromosome Missing piece of chromosome Change in gene sequence: Insertion or deletion of a few bases Change of a single base where it matters
Describe the potential effects of mutations in promoter and splice site sequences
Stop transcription or cause abnormal splicing
Describe the potential effects of mutations in a base change causing an amino acid change
Change in protein sequence
Not every base change causes disease
This may or may not reduce protein function
Some missense mutations make a protein work faster
What mutation may cut a genetic sequence short?
Base change causing a premature stop codon
Describe the potential effects of mutations in insertion or deletion of bases
remember that 3bp encode 1 amino acid Mutations may be “in-frame” or “out of frame”
Describe the potential effects of mutations in trinucleotide repeat expansions
replication of a trinucleotide
Go over some mutations and their effects at different parts of the gene
Promotor and splice site sequence changes: Stop transcription or cause abnormal splicing
Base change causing an amino acid change:
Change in protein sequence
Not every base change causes disease
This may or may not reduce protein function
Some missense mutations make a protein work faster
Base change causing a premature stop codon
Insertion or deletion of bases:
remember that 3bp encode 1 amino acid Mutations may be “in-frame” or “out of frame”
Trinucleotide repeat expansions: replication of a trinucleotide
Use “The cat sat on the mat” to describe different types of DNA mutation
• The cat sat on the mat
Wild Type
• The cat
Stop
• The car sat on the mat
Missense
• The cat spa to nth ema t
Insertion
• The cas ato nt hem at
Deletion (out of frame)
• The cat on the mat
Deletion (in frame)
• The cat cat sat on the mat
Triplet Expansion
What are disorders with mendelian inheritance?
A change in a single gene, sufficient to cause clinical disease, is inherited in a fashion predicted by Mendel’s laws
What is non-mendelian inheritance?
Everything else not inherited in a fashion predicted by Mendel’s laws, including common “multifactorial” diseases.
What are the different kinds of mendelian inheritance?
Autosomal dominant Autosomal recessive
X-linked
(Mitochondrial)
What is the symbol for male in pedigree drawing?
a square
What is the symbol for female in pedigree drawing?
a circle
What is the symbol for an unaffected individual in pedigree drawing?
a blank shape