Mutational Mechanisms of Disease Flashcards
Loss of function
Caused by genetic mutations (deletions, insertions, or rearrangements) that eliminate (or reduce) the function of the protein.
MOST COMMON genetic mechanism.
Often have mutations in the coding region and an abnormal protein. Ex: beta thalassemia.
Examples of loss of function?
Duchenne’s (complete loss of a protein).
Alpha-thalassemia (deleted copy)
Turner syndrome: lose entire chromosome
Hereditary Rb: 2nd hit leading to loss of tumor suppressor
Hereditary neuropathy, pressure palsies: deletion of a gene
Osteogenesis imperfecta type I: stop/frameshift mutations, premature termination. Reduced amount of collagen. Milder form.
MANY metabolic diseases. OFTEN inherited as AR
Gain of function
Genetic mutations (often missense, sometimes promoter) that enhance one or more normal functions of a protein (increased expression, increased half-life, decreased degradation, increased activity).
Gain of fx. examples
Hb-Kempsey: bind O2 tighter, unloading harder
Achondroplasia: increased normal signaling through intracellular tyrosine kinase domain (receptor is ‘constitutively on’)
Charcot-Marie-Tooth: type 1A. duplication of gene (vs HNPP), elevated PMP22 protein.
OFTEN AD inheritance (carrying one mutant allele sufficient for disease).
Novel Property Mutations
Relatively uncommon.
Caused by mutations (often missense) that confer a novel property on the protein, without necessarily altering its normal fx. Soemtimes advantageous, but mostly bad.
Novel property examples:
Sickle cell: Low oxygen states valine leads to polymerization into fibers
Huntingtons: expansion of CAG, increased glut above a certain threshold leads to novel toxic effect
Ectopic or Heterochronic Expression Mutations
Caused by mutations that alter regulatory regions of a gene and alter the timing (heterchronic= wrong time) or location (ectopic) of expression.
Examples of ectopic/heterochronic expression
Cancer: gene that is normally silent (in differentiated cells for example) is abnormally expressed (turned back on) leads to abnormal proliferation. Oncogenes are example.
HPFH: normal switch from fetal to adult Hb does not happen, fetal Hb has higher affinity for O2. Delete genes in beta locus but retain the fetal gamma gene, so it keeps being expressed.
What are repeat sequences subject to?
Slipped mispairing. So repeat #’s change in passage to offspring.
Genetic anticipation
disease severity worsening with subsequent generations.
Expansion of noncoding repeats (get loss of function)
Fragile X, Friedreich ataxia
Expansion of noncoding repeats (get novel properties)
Myotonic dystrophy types 1 and 2
Fragile X associated tremor/ataxia (FXTAS)
Expansion of codons in exons
Huntingtons
Spinocerebellar ataxia