Multifactorial Inheritance 04.10.22 Flashcards
What is multifactorial?
- Diseases that are due to a combination of genetic and environmental factors
- Most common diseases are multifactorial
How do we identify that a condition has a genetic component?
By clinical observation:
- Family studies
- Twin studies
- Adoption studies
How do we carry out a family study?
- compare the incidence of a disease amongst the relatives of an affected individual with the general population
What effects does a MF condition have?
- risk of the condition in relatives of an affected individual is dramatically higher than in the general population
- the risk varies directing with the degree of genetic relationship (e.g high chance with sibling)
- risk varies with the severity of the proband’s illness
- risk varies with the number of relatives affected
Example: Risks of Schizophrenia for relatives
Risk is much higher when there is a first-degree relationship compared to second and third
E.g. If your parent has Sc then you have a 5.6% chance of getting it
E.g. If you have a child with Sc then you have a 12.8% chance of getting it
What is a twin study using concordance rate?
- Compare genetically identical (Monozygotic) with genetically non-identical (Dizygotic) twins
- Concordance rate is the % of twin pairs studied that both have the condition
- If a condition has a genetic component then you would expect the concordance rate to be higher in MZ than DZ twins.
- concordance rate gives a rough figure for the heritability of a MF disorder
- environmental things will have a low concordance rate between twins e.g. car accident, being shot etc…
What are adoption studies?
- adopted children of a parent with a MF condition have a high risk of developing the disease
- an adopted parent and child will have a low risk whereas adopted child and biological child will still have a high risk
What is hereditability?
- Proportion of the causes of a condition that can be linked to genetic factors as opposed to environmental factors
- Expressed as a proportion of 1 or as a percentage
- one way to calculate is using the concordance rate in MZ twins.
What are the characteristics of Multifactorial Inheritance?
- incidence on the condition is greatest amongst relatives of the most severely affected patients
- risk is greatest for first degree relatives and then decreases rapidly in distant
- if there is more than one affected close relative then the risks for other relatives are increased
What happens if a condition is more common in one particular sex?
E.g. Pyloric stenosis.
Males are much more likely to have this disease so if a female has this condition, it probably has something genetic going on.
If a female infant with pyloric stenosis then their brother has a 9.2% chance of having it and sister has 3.8 %.
- If the condition is more common in one particular sex, then relatives of an affected individual of the less frequently affected sex will be at a higher risk than relatives of an affected individual of the more frequently affected sex
What is the liability / threshold model?
- Liability: the factors that influence the development of a multifactorial disorder
- The curve for relatives is shifted to the right compared to the general population
- the closer the relationship, the greater the shift to the right
- a threshold exists above which the abnormal phenotype is expressed
What is the population and familial incidence?
In the general population, the proportion beyond the threshold is the population incidence and among relatives is the familial incidence
What are Genome Wide association studies (GWAS)?
- uses the fact a gene can have several variants (alleles)
- some variants cause disease and are pathogenic some are not
- can sequence an area and try to identify the gene and the particular allele that is associated with the increased likelihood of developing the condition
What are polymorphisms?
Genetic variation that still results in a functioning gene e.g. SNP (single nucleotide polymorphisms)
Example of GWAS?
Large cohort of prostate cancer patients
- more than 70 common low risk susceptibility loci were identified
- individually each one conferred only a small risk for prostate cancer
- the combined contribution of these common sequence variants explained only about 30% of the heritable risk