X Linked Inheritance Flashcards

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1
Q

What is lyonization? How does it occur?

A

X-inactivation, occurs in females early in development and completely randomly, forming Barr bodies. On average, the X that’s inactivated is 50/50 maternal:paternal

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2
Q

What gene regulates the inactivation process? Which X chromosome is it expressed in?

A

XIST - inactive X specific transcripts gene. Only gene other than the pseudoautosomal region on the inactivated X chromosome which is expressed

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3
Q

How does XIST work?

A

Encodes non-coding mRNA which transcriptionally silence the X chromosome via binding repressor proteins

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4
Q

How is the information about the Barr-bodied chromosome carried in subsequent cell divisions?

A

Via DNA methylation

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5
Q

In women with X-chromosome deletions, which X is inactivated and what is the exception to this?

A

The X-chromosome with the deletion is inactivated

Exception: X:autosome translocation, which inactivates the normal X chromosome in order to prevent functional monosome of the autosome

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6
Q

What is the significance of the pseudoautosomal region of the X chromosome?

A

Not inactivated in the Barr body, it’s the part which pairs in metaphase with the Y chromosome via homologous pairing. It is called “pseudoautosomal” because it is always activated, like an autosome’s.

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7
Q

What is the hallmark of X-linked inheritance?

A

No male to male transmission

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8
Q

What is the general normal process of hemostasis (clotting)? What protein activates platelets, and what protein forms the mesh?

A
  1. Vascular constriction to limit blood flow
  2. Platelet activation via thrombin, aggregate at site of injury forming a plug
  3. Formation of mesh via fibrin, which entraps the plug
  4. Dissolution of clot to allow normal blood flow
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9
Q

What are the most important clinical features of hemophilia A/B? What percentage will have a family history?

A

Defective clotting cascade

  1. Joint + muscle hemorrhages
  2. Easy bruising / prolonged bleeding
  3. Common hematomas in muscles or intracranial bleeding
  4. Hemarthroses - bleeding in the joints which can lead to arthritis

50% of both will have a family history

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10
Q

What causes Hemophilia A? What is its penetrance?

A

Absence of factor 8 (VIII), which is needed for 9a’s conversion of 10 to 10a. 100% penetrant in males, 10% in females (just some easy bruising)

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11
Q

What type of mutation is Hemophilia A?

A

About 50% of people have the same intronic inversion, a very common type of mutation. Causes three exons to change order within the gene due to homolgous crossing over.

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12
Q

What causes Hemophilia B? What is the relative prevalence?

A

Deficiency in Clotting Factor 9 (christmas factor)

much less prevalent than Hemophilia A. There’s a large amount of variation in the mutation

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13
Q

What are the primary treatments for Hemophilia A?

A
  1. Desmopressin, which releases unused factor 8 from cells

2. IV factor 8, which used to be given in unpurified plasma

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14
Q

What are the features of Duchenne muscular dystrophy?

A

X-linked recessive disorder caused by deterioration of muscle cells, especially proximal first. Can cause cardiomyopathy and skeletal deformities secondary to weakness. Onset is in early childhood, with death by 3rd decade due to cardiac or respiratory complications

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15
Q

What are the clinical signs of DMD?

A
  1. Elevated creatine kinase (10x in DMD, 5x in BMD)
  2. Gower manuever -
  3. Pseudohypertrophy of calves - due to destruction / inflammation
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16
Q

What is the Gower manuever?

A

The patient will start lying prone, then walk up their body to assume an upright posture due to proximal muscle weakness.

17
Q

What is Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD)?

A

Also X-linked, but milder than Duchenne. Rarer than DMD, but has a later onset allowing for a longer lifespan

18
Q

What causes DMD / BMD? What determines outcome

A

Mutations of dystropin gene, which is the largest known gene. Most are deletions, and about 1/3 are novel. The precise nature of the mutation determines the severity. 60-70% of cases will be caused by deletions in 1 or more exon.

Dystrophin structurally links myofibrillar membrane to contractile proteins

19
Q

What other tests can be run to diagnose DMD / BMD?

A

EMG, muscle biopsy (in the past), immunohistochemistry, and molecular testing (Standard of care now)

20
Q

Different alleles of what gene can cause androgen insensitivity syndrome / spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy? What is this called?

A

Androgen receptor gene,

this is a strange form of allelic heterogeneity, since different mutations in the same gene can cause different diseases

21
Q

What ultimately leads to testicular feminization in androgen insensitivity syndrome?

A

End-organ unresponsiveness causes excess testosterone to be converted to estriol and subsequent feminization (breast development, blind vagina, absent / sparse pubic or axillary hair)

22
Q

What are the clinical features of androgen insensitivity syndrome?

A
Karyotype 46,XY
Normal appearing tall, thin females
Primary amenorrhea
Normal female external genitalia
Absent uterus / fallopian tubesm with bilateral internal testes increasing risk of gonadoblastoma
23
Q

Why do Androgen insensitive patient develop testes in the first place?

A

Gonadal differentiate is determined by presence of SRY genes, by androgens are required for development of male external genitalia

24
Q

What is the mutation in androgen insensitivity syndrome?

A

Premature termination of protein

25
Q

What is the mutation in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy and what is this syndrome also called?

A

Kennedy’s disease
Mutation is trinucleotide repeat (CAG) which alters protein conformation, causing a gain of function mutation which expands the receptor with a polyglutamine stretch

26
Q

Why are women not affected by Kennedy’s disease?

A

There aren’t high enough circulating androgens to activate mutant receptor, even in homozygous recessive

27
Q

What are the clinical features of Kennedy’s disease?

A

Difficulty walking (proximal muscle wakness)
Difficulties speaking / swallowing (aspiration) due to bulbar atrophy
Gynecomastia, testicular atrophy, and reduced fertility due to mild androgen insensitivity

28
Q

What are the hallmarks of X-linked dominant inheritance?

A

Conditions affect both males and females, with no male-male transmission. However, males typically have a more severe phenotype (no wild type X to help)

29
Q

What is the most common inherited cause of intellectual disability in males?

A

Fragile X syndrome - moderate to severe

30
Q

What are the physical features of Fragile X?

A

Prominent, square jaw, macroorchidism (large testes), intellectual disability, macrocephaly, behavioral problems

31
Q

Who is most affected by fragile X?

A

Males, although females have half the prevalence since it is X-linked dominant

32
Q

What causes fragile X syndrome? When is someone at risk?

A

> 200 trinucleotide repeats CGG in the FMR1 gene. This will cause stopping of translation (intronic region).

> 55 repeats is considered “premutation”, and there is repeat instability when this is maternally transmitted.

33
Q

What are two conditions associated with the pre-mutation state of Fragile X?

A
  1. Fragile X Tremor Ataxia Syndrome (FXTAS) - late onset, progressive cerebellar ataxia which affects males more
  2. Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) - cessation of menses in 20% of premutation carriers due to excess mRNA
34
Q

What is meant by “anticipation” in genetics?

A

Apparent worsening of a disorder in each generation, as explained by trinucleotide repeat syndromes

35
Q

What important genes are Y-linked?

A

SRY - sex-determining region of Y, can sometimes translocate to X

Azoospermia factor regions, including deleted in azoospermia (DAZ) gene

RNA-binding proteins essential for spermatogenesis