7. Inheritance Patterns Flashcards

1
Q

Key for pedigree drawing

A
  • Males are squares
  • Females are circles
  • Partners have a line between them
  • Siblings have a line above them
  • Line down for children
  • Affected people are shaded
  • Carriers have dots in
  • Double line joins union of consanguineous couple (share the same blood)
  • Unknown sex are diamonds
  • P stands for pregnant
  • SB stands for stillborn
  • Non-identical twins have an incomplete triangle above them - identical twins have a complete triangle above them
  • Triangle shows miscarriage
  • Triangle with a line through it shows therapeutic abortion
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2
Q

What are the 4 ways of inheritance?

A

1) Autosomal dominant
2) Autosomal recessive
3) X-Linked
4) Y-Linked

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3
Q

Autosomal dominant inheritance. Main points.

A
  • Manifest in HETEROZYGOUS form
  • Multiple generations affected
  • Both sexes affected
  • Male to female & female to male transmission
  • Most will have an affected parent
  • 50% risk to offspring
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4
Q

What are the characteristics of inheritance patterns autosomal dominant (AD)?

A
  • Most individuals have an affected parent (not everybody due to cases of new mutations or incomplete penetrance).
  • Males and females are equally likely to inherit the allele and be affected.
  • Risk for each child of an affected parent is ½.
  • If an affected individual’s siblings/children are not affected, and they do not carry the mutation they cannot pass it on to their own offspring.
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5
Q

Features of autosomal dominant inheritance

A
  • Many dominant disorders show age-dependant penetrance
  • Variable expressivity
  • de novo mutation rate varies considerably between AD conditions
  • Somatic mosaicism is present in only some tissues/cells
  • Mutation present in variable proportion of gametes; can be transmitted to offspring
  • Anticipation characteristically occurs in triplet repeat disorders (e.g. Huntington’s)
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6
Q

What is penetrance?

A

Percentage of individuals who carry the mutation AND develop symptoms of the disorder

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7
Q

What is variable expressivity?

A

Variation in severity/symptoms of disorder between individuals ( or within the family) with same mutation

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8
Q

What is somatic and germ-line mosaicism (gonadal mosaicism)?

A
  • Somatic mosaicism: new mutn arising at early stage in embryogenesis
  • Germ-line mosaicism (gonadal mosaicism): new mutn arises during oogenesis or spermatogenesis
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9
Q

What is anticipation of a disease?

A

Worsening of disease severity in successive generations

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10
Q

Autosomal recessive inheritance. Main points.

A
  • Manifest in HOMOZYGOUS/ COMPOUND HETEROZYGOUS form
  • Carriers (heterozygote) not affected
  • Both sexes affected
  • Male to female and female to male transmission
  • Usually one generation affected
  • May be consanguinity - e.g. cousin marriages
  • 25% affected, whilst 50% carriers
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11
Q

What is the difference between compound heterozygote and homozygote?

A

• In homozygote, there are 2 identical mutations in the same gene
• In compound heterozygote, there are 2 different mutation in the same gene.
- The outcome is the same as both copies are still not functioning properly. e.g. in cystic fibrosis.
- This is seem more often than homozygous

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12
Q

Features of autosomal recessive inheritance

A
  • Trait often found in clusters of siblings but not in parents & offspring.
  • Recurrence risk = 1/4 for each sibling of affected person.
  • Carrier probability =2/3 for unaffected siblings of affected person.
  • All offspring of affected person are obligate carriers.
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13
Q

X-linked inheritance

A
• Women have two X chromosomes
     - Two copies of X-linked genes
     - Can be homozygous or heterozgous
• Men have one X and a Y 
     - Only a single copy of X-linked genes
     - Hemizygous
• Can be recessive (mostly)
     - Women are carriers + unaffected
     - No male to male transmission
• Can be dominant
     - Women are affected
     - Males more severely affected/lethal
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14
Q

Aspects of x-linked recessive inheritance

A
  • X-linked genes never passed from father to son.
  • All daughters of affected males are obligate carriers.
  • Children of carrier females have a 50% chance of inheriting mutant allele.

• SKEWED X-INACTIVATION: normally the majority of genes on one of a woman’s X-chromosomes are inactivated
- the active mutated X chromosome is the one expressing all the proteins
• MANIFESTING CARRIERS: some women have some symptoms in X-linked recessive conditions e.g. cardiomyopathy in DMD.

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15
Q

Y-linked inheritance

A

Always and only passed from fathers to sons

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16
Q

What is a mutation? What are the different types? and where are they found?

A
  • Mutation: a change in the genetic material
  • A pathogenic mutation (pathogenic variant) results in an alteration of the function of the gene product and can cause a disease phenotype
  • Depending on the type of mutation – can present as dominant or recessive
• Types:
     - Substitutions (point mutations)
     - Deletions 
     - Insertions
• Found in:
     - Coding DNA
     - Non-coding DNA (such as promoters and introns)
17
Q

What is a missense and nonsense mutation?

A
  • Missense = a point mutation with leads to a change in AA (a type of nonsynonymous substitution)
  • Nonsense = when the codon is changed into a stop codon
18
Q

Impact of amino acid substitution

A
  • Physicochemical similarity between the two aminoacids
  • Functional role of the specific domain of the protein
  • Phylogenetic conservation of original aminoacid amongst diverse species
19
Q

What is the different between in-frame mutations and frameshift muations?

A
  • In-frame is indels (insertion/deletions) of nucleotides that is divisible by 3 (doesn’t change the frame)
  • Frameshift mutations are indels of nucleoties that is not divisible by 3.

• Frameshift indels and nonsense mutations are more likely to be pathogenic.