Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Genetics Post-Midterm
N/A
148
Biochemistry
Graduate
03/12/2011

Additional Biochemistry Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Allele
Definition

Different versions of a gene

 

Can be detected due to base pair differences (RFLP)

Term
Polymorphism
Definition

A gene for which multiple alleles exist in the population

 

ex. ABO blood groups, G6PD variants, etc.

 

- Allele must be present in at least 1% of population to be considered polymorphic

Term
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Definition

1 = p2 +2pq + q2

 

p2 = % people with w.t., functional allele

q2 = % people with non-functional allele

2pq = % heterozygotes/carriers

 

p + q = 1

 

(sum of frequency of both alleles in population = 1)

Term
Allele Frequency
Definition

% of chromosomes in the population with a specific allele

 

ex. 64/100 people have genotype MM

32/100 have genotype MN

 

Allele Frequency of M = [(2 x 64) + 32] / 200  (200 chromosomes in 100 people)

= 160/200 = 0.8

Term
Metacentric Chromosomes
Definition

Centromere is at center of chromosome p arm = q arm

 

Chromosomes: 

Term
Submetacentric Chromosomes
Definition

p arm < q arm

 

Chromosomes: 

Term
Acrocentric Chromosomes
Definition

Centromere is located at tip of chromatid pair

 

p-arm is basically non-existent (satellite)

 

Chromosomes: 13, 18. 21

Term
Chromosomal Abnormalities
Definition

Polyploidy/Euploidy

Triploidy = 3x all chromosomes; usually fatal in 1st trimester

Tetraploidy = 4x all chromosomes; fatal

 

Aneuploidy

Monosomy = single chromosome - fatal; except Turners Syndrome (single X chromosome)

Trisomy = 3x single chromosome; autosomal or sex-chromosome

Term
Alternate Segregation
Definition

- During gametogenesis with reciprocally/Robertsonian translated chromosomes:

 

1) Homologous regions pair (forms an +)

2) Can segregate horizontally or on a diagonal

3) Alternate Segregation = diagonal assortment --> results in balanced chromosomal material in gametes (complete chromosomes of each)

4) Normal with fertilization

5) Offspring are translocation carriers

Term
Trisomy 21
Definition

Down Syndrome - 47,XX+21 or 47,XY+21

 

- most common autosomal trisomy

- Risk: AMA --> increased risk of MI non-dysjunction

- Usually two maternal chromosomes - each have different alleles if NDJ was at MI (mothers and fathers)

- Sxs: mental retardation, low IQ, delayed milestones

- Short stature, depressed nasal bridge, epicanthal fold (above eyes), Simian crease (hand)

- CHDs (mortality)

- Alzheimers-like sxs at a young age

Term
Trisomy 18
Definition

Edward Syndrome - 47,XX+18 or 47,XY+18

 

-Risk: AMA --> increased risk of non-dysjunction

-Sxs: mental retardation

-clenched fist, overlapping fingers, rocker-bottom feet

- CHDs

- low-set ears, micrognathia (small jaw)

 

- Often stillborn or early mortality

Term
Trisomy 13
Definition

Patau Syndrome - 47,XY+13 or 47,XX+13

 

- Risk: AMA --> increased non-dysjunction

- Sxs: Mental retardation

- Polydactyly

- Cleft lip/palate

- Microphthalmia

- Microcephaly

- Cardiac anomalies

 

*least compatible with life of the trisomies*

Term
Turner's Syndrome
Definition

45,X

- Non-dysjunction during meiosis

- Sxs:   - Short stature

- Webbed neck, swelling of hands, feet, neck

- Primary amenorrhea; gonadal dysgenesis ('streak ovaries' --> no secondary sex characteristics)

 

- Often mosaic (some 45,X - no Barr body; some 46,XX; some 47,XXX) - indicates mitotic nondysjunction

Term
Klinefelter's Syndrome
Definition

- 47,XXY (one X is Barr body - inactive)

- Difficult to dx @ birth - emerges in puberty

- Meiotic non-dysjunction

- Sxs: - Infertility (testicular atrophy)

- Gynecomastia

- Female hair distribution

Term
Meiosis I Non-dysjunction
Definition

- Results in gametes with 2 copies of different maternal chromosomes

 

- Most common type in females

 

In males: produces:

2 (      ) gametes --> Turner's 

2 ( XY ) gametes --> Klinefelters

Term
Meiosis II Non-dysjumction
Definition

- Results in gametes with two copies of the same chromosomes

 

- In males produces:

2 (     ) gametes --> Turner's

1 ( XX ) gamete --> Triple X Syndrome

1 (  YY  ) gamete --> increased aggression

Term
Mitosis Non-dysjunction
Definition

- Cells show more than one type of genetic composition -- mosaicism

 

- Occurs during embryonic development

Term
Balanced Abnormality
Definition
No gain/loss of genetic material
Term
Unbalanced Abnormality
Definition
- Gain/loss of genetic material
Term
Reciprocal Translocation
Definition

Exchange of genetic material between non-homologous chromosomes (different #s)

 

Effects: 

- Somatic Cells: transformation to cancer --> uncontrolled growth

ex. Philadelphia Chromosome - (t(9;22)) activation of ABL oncogene --> cancer 

- moves ABL from c#9 to near BCR gene --> creates a new TyrKinase that promotes growth 

 

- Germline Cells: increased SAB

Term
Adjacent Segregation
Definition

- During gametogenesis with reciprocally/Robertsonian translated chromosomes:

 

1) Homologous regions pair (forms an +)

2) Can segregate horizontally or on a diagonal

3) Adjacent Segregation = horizontal assortment --> results in unbalanced chromosomal material in gametes 

4) Partial trisomy of one chromosome and monosomy of other in each gamete

5) Nonviable/high SAB/trisomy risk/

 

Term
Robertsonian Translocation
Definition

- Unbalanced translocation that occurs in acrocentric chromosomes (13,14,15,21,22)

- Fusion of 1 short (p) arms of each translocated chromosome (satellites - contain t/rRNA genes)

- Fusion of 2 long (q) arms

- Results in loss of 1 chromosome (2 fused satellites --> ex. 45,XX,-14,-21,+t(14,21))

- Gametogenesis: adjacent or alternate segregation can produced balanced translocation carriers or unbalanced/partial trisomy gametes

- Causes 2-5% DS cases

Term
Cri du Chat Syndrome
Definition

- Deletion of chromosome 5p -->ex. 46,XX del(5p)

- Caused by spontaneous unequal CO

 

- Sxs:  high pitched cry, mental retardation, speech problems, microcephaly

Term

DiGeorge Syndrome

(Velocardiofacial Syndrome)

Definition

- Microdeletion of chromosome 22q

- Most common microdeletion

 

Sxs:  CHDs, thymic aplasia (-->immunodeficiency), cleft lip/palate, learning disabilities, narrow palpebral fissures, prominent nasal root

Term
Angelman Syndrome
Definition

- Deletion of maternal chromosome 15

 

- Paternally-imprinted genes on C15--> complete loss of function

Term
Prader-Willi Syndrome
Definition

- Deletion of paternal chromosome 15

 

- Maternally-imprinted genes on C15 --> complete loss of function

Term
Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome
Definition

- Microdeletion of chromosome 4p

 

-Sxs: widely-spaced eyes, prominent nose, abnormal iris, CHDs, mental/developmental delays

Term
Inversions
Definition

- Pericentric - involve centromere

- Paracentric - no centromeric involvement

 

- Usually balanced and spontaneous (no information loss)

- Changes karyotype banding pattern

[image]

- In meiosis:  homologous pairing of inverted segments + RC can result in duplication/deletion of segments and/or centromeres:

--> acentric = no centromere

--> dicentric = two centromeres

 

Term
Isochromosomes
Definition

- Loss of one arm + duplication of another arm

 

ex. X isochromosome - long (q) arms join to form 2q structure, (p) arms form 2p

 

- Some patients have [1 X isochromosome + 1 normal] :: 3 long arms, 1 short arm --> manifests as Turner Syndrome (aka 45,X)

Term
Ring Chromosomes
Definition

Loss of telomeric genetic material --> fusion of terminal ends

 

- No gene loss

- Causes high rate of MAB (meiosis errors)

- Increases with radiation exposure (higher rates of breakage)

Term

H-W Shortcuts:

Autosomal Recessive

Definition
q2 = I
Term
Autosomal Recessive Rules
Definition

#1 Sibling of a known affected individual = 2/3 carrier risk

 

#2 Parent of a child with A.R. disease must be a carrier

 

#3 Sibling of a known carrier has a 1/2 chance of being a carrier themselves

 

#4 Affected parent will always have all carrier children

Term

H-W Shortcuts:

X-Linked Recessive Diseases

Definition

q = I

(since only affected males are counted - a female with disease is unlikely and won't change allele frequency enough to be significant anyway)

Term

H-W Shortcuts:

Autosomal Dominant Diseases

Definition

I = 2pq

 

q = I/2 (since p = 1)

Term
H-W Assumptions
Definition

1.) Large population

2.) Random mating

3.) No change in mutation rate

4.) No gene flow in/out of population

Term
H-W Deviations
Definition

  • Genetic drift in small populations
  • Founder Effect: new population establishment by a very small number of individuals from a larger population = limited gene pool
  • Gene flow due to population migration
  • Incest, consanguinity, inbreeding
  • Natural selection

Term
Autosomal Recessive Diseases
Definition

'These Carrier Patients Can Stay Healthy'

 

Tay-Sachs

Cystic Fibrosis

PKU

Canavan Disease

Sickle Cell Anemia

Hemochomotosis

 

Thalassemia (a/b)

Xeroderma Pigmentosa

Hurler's Sydrome

MSUD

Alkaptonuria

a-1-Antitrypsin Deficiency

Bloom Syndrome

Xeroderma Pigmentosum

Ataxia Telangiectasia

Term
X-Linked Recessive Diseases
Definition

'Lucky Guys Don't Have R/G Colorblindness'

 

Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome

G6PD Deficiency

Duchenne MD/Becker MD

Hemophilia A/B

R/G Colorblindness

 

 

 

 

Term
Autosomal Dominant Diseases
Definition

'Family Members All Have the M.O.A.Ns'

 

Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FHC)

Marfan's Syndrome

Achondroplasia

Huntington's Disease

Myotonic Dystrophy

Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Acute Intermittent Porphyria (AIP)

Neurofibromatosis

 

Retinoblastoma (need 2 mutations total)

HNPCC

FAP

BRCA1/2

Li-Fraumeni

Term
Heterozygote Advantage
Definition

- Heterozgosity imparts some selective advantage to individuals

 

ex. Sickle Cell Anemia and B-thalassemia - heterozygous individuals possess F. malaria resistance

 

- Changes H-W equilibrium - keeps mutant allele in gene pool at relatively high frequency

Term
Reproductive Fitness
Definition

Ability to survive and reproduce (i.e. to pass allele to offspring)

 

ex. Tay Sach - fitness = 0; no survival to reproductive age

ex. Turner Syndrome - fitness = 0; infertility

ex. Huntington's Disease - fitness = average; disease doesn't manifest until after reproductive age in most individuals

 

Term
Genetic Drift
Definition

 - Random changes in p and q during meiosis

 

- Much more pronounced in small populations (larger population --> less influence)

- Can fix or extinguish an allele over multiple generations

Term
Founder Effect
Definition

- Allele amplification when a new, small population diverts from main population or a new allele enters a small population

 

- Can be coupled to social, religious or geographic isolation --> even more pronounced

 

ex. Albinism in Hopi Indians in AZ

ex. Tay-Sachs, Gaucher's and Canavan Disease in Ashkenazi Jews

ex. Huntington's in Venezuela village

Term
Consanguinity
Definition

- Mating with an individual who is a second cousin or closer (i.e share a grandparent)

 

- More likely to share same disease-causing genes - results in higher incidence of recessive diseases in particular

Term
Multifactorial Diseases
Definition

- Multiple genetic and environmental factors involved in disease process (genetic susceptibility + environmenta influence)

- No simple inheritance pattern

- Genetic component is often polygenic 

 

- Examples: diabetes, cancer, CAD, mental health, neurodegenerative disorders (ex. Schizophrenia)

 

- Investigation - use association, population, family and twin studies

Term
Polygenic Inheritance
Definition

Inheritance/expression are dictated by many additive genes at different loci (cumulative)

 

Influenced by modifier genes

 

No single gene is dominant or recessive to another

 

Shows normal/bell curve distribution

 

ex. Height, blood pressure, intelligence - involve many genes + environmental factors

Term
Sex Prediliction
Definition

- Risk of having a disease is higher in one sex than the other

 

- However, if a female has a disease that is usually  male-predisposed, it means there are more 'bad genes' present - her male relatives have an even higher risk

Term
Liability/Threshold Model
Definition

Liability = all genetic + environmental factors that contribute to a disease/disorder

Threshold = point on normal curve above an abnormal phenotype is expressed (beyond threshold = affected)

- Threshold can be higher for one sex than the other (ex. males = higher rates of CAD and pyloric stenosis - lower threshold; females = higher rate of spina bifida - lower threshold)

 

- Liability curve for relatives of an affected individual is shifted to the right (i.e. more susceptible to develop the disorder - more 'bad genes' present)

- Threshold stays the same

:: higher # of people above threshold = higher familial incidence of disease

- If more than one affected individual in a family, curve shifts even more

Term
Multifactorial Inheritance Risk Assessment
Definition

- Risk INCREASES with # of affected individuals in a family 

 

- Risk INCREASES with severity of defect/disease ('more bad genes')

(this is the opposite of Mendelian inheritance, where severity/frequency don't affect recurrence risk)


- When there is sex predilection for a defect, if an individual from the less-affected sex is affected, the risk for their offspring is even higher

 

- Recurrence risk for 1st-degree relatives (siblings, offspring) = square-root of I

 

Term
Heritability
Definition

- An estimate of the % of origin of a disease caused by genetic factors (as opposed to environmental)

(:: will never be 100% for multifactorial diseases)

 

- Provide an indication of importance of genetic factors in a condition

 

:: greater heritability --> greater genetic component

[image]

Term
Population/Migration Studies
Definition

- Study of migrant groups with low disease incidence

 

After Migration:

- If migrant population maintains low incidence in new population with high incidence --> highly heritable disorder (genetic > environmental)

 

- If migrant population develops new, higher incidence --> environmental factors > genetic

Term
Twin Studies
Definition

MZ Twins - single zygote :: same genes, same IU environment

 

DZ Twins - two zygotes :: 50% shared genes, same IU environment

 

- Compare incidence in MZ and DZ twins to examine genetic v. environmental factors in multifactorial disease

- Compare Concordance vs. Discordance

Term
Concordance
Definition

In twin studies: presence of a disease in both individuals

 

- If concordance for MZ > DZ --> disease has a genetic component

- If concordance for DZ = MZ --> caused by environmental factors 

- 100% concordance = single-gene disorder

Term
Discordance
Definition

In twin studies: presence of disease in one individual but not the other

 

- If a factor is discordant in MZ twins - must be due to environmental influence

- If a factor is discordant in DZ twins - must be due to genetics

Term
Adoption Studies
Definition

 Help differentiate between environmental and genetic disease causation

 

Ex. Adopted children of schizophrenics have a higher % of schizophrenia because of the large genetic component (same genes, different environment)

Term
Association Studies
Definition

Occurrence of some alleles more commonly in individuals affected with a disease than in the general population

 

- Useful for studying multifactorial diseases

- Identify susceptibility loci - not (+) diagnostic factors for a disease but indicators of susceptibility

 

ex. HLA B27 - seen in 90% of people with ankylosing spondylitis

- However, only 1% of people with HLA B27 develop ankylosing spondylitis :: there must be environmental factors as well

Term
Susceptibility Locus
Definition

- Used in association studies to assess linkage between an allele/SNP and likelihood of developing a disease

 

- Not a (+) diagnostic factor for a disease but an indicator of susceptibility

Term
Whole-Genome Association Studies
Definition

- Compare entire genome of people with a disease to the entire genome of those without it

 

- Useful in identifying new susceptibility loci

Term
Odds Ratio
Definition

- Quantification of level of association between a risk factor and a disease

 

- What are the odds of an affected person having a risk factor compared to an unaffected person?

 

ex. Odds Ratio = 2 - the risk of person with ankylosing spondylitis having HLA B27 is 2x that of an unaffected person

 

- Odds Ratio > 1 = association between risk factor and disease

 

--> if you have a disease - what's the chance you'll have a given risk factor?

Term
Relative Risk
Definition

- Relates the difference in outcomes for those with and without a susceptibility locus

 

ex. Relative risk = 20 - chances of developing ankylosing spondylitis in a person with HLA B 27 is 20x higher than in a person without HLA B 27

 

--> if you have a risk factor - what's the chance you will be affected?

 

Term
NTDs
Definition

Neural Tube Defects

- Multifactorial

 

Genetic Factors:

MTHFR (methyl-THF reductase)

MTHFD (methy-THF dehydrogenase)

Previous history of child with NTD

 

Environmental Factors:

Maternal folate ingestion prior to and during preg

 

Dx: maternal AFP, U/S to visualize development

Term
Diabetes Mellitus Type I
Definition

- Autoimmune destruction of B-cells of pancreas

- Controlled w/ insulin replacement injections

 

- Large familial/genetic component

- 20 associated susceptibility loci:

ex. HLA-DQ2/DQ8 - chromosome 6

ex. Insulin gene - VNTR polymorphism

Term
Diabetes Mellitus Type II
Definition

- Peripheral insulin resistance; variable degrees of secretory defect

- Adult onset

- Pts usually obese

 

- Multifactorial with a large environmental component :: tx and prevention usually includes lifestyle changes

- Multiple genetic components, include:

ex. PPARG (peroxismal proliferator-activated receptor-gamma)

ex. Glucokinase (in Type II MODY - maturity-onset diabetes of the young)

Term
Alzheimer's Disease
Definition

- Most common cause of dementia

- Multifactorial disease

- Dx: amyloid deposits of amyloid-B-precursor protein and Tau protein (MTAP) in neurofibrillary tangles and plaques

 

Two Forms:

1.) Familial - dominant inheritance

- Early-onset

- C1 = Presenilin-2

- C14 = Presenilin-1

- C21 = amyloid-precursor protein

 

2.) Sporatic

- Late-onset

- Susceptibility locus = ApoE4

- Environmental factors: poor CV health, age, head injury, smoking, aluminum exposure

Term
Cystic Fibrosis
Definition

- Autosomal recessive

Mutations: (1000+ discovered)

- FΔ508 deletion --> loss of Phe

- Causes misfolding and degradation of CFTR protein in mucus epithelium

- R117H single BP mutation - from Arg --> His

- Milder phenotype - CFTR present but with reduced Cl- conductance capacity

 

Sxs - variable severity

- Lung/liver/pancreatic disease,

- Elevated sweat Cl

- Male infertility

 

Term
Osteogenesis Imperfecta
Definition

- Autosomal Dominant

- Dominant-Negative mutations

- Defect in Type I collagen formation

Mutations:

- Primarily due to de novo mutations (esp in most lethal cases) :: highly variable location/type of mutation (heterogeneity)

OI Type I - usually introduction of premature stop codon in COL1A1 gene --> ↓mRNA stability

OI Types II-IV - glycine substitution in pro-α chain --> prevents normal helical structure

 

Sxs: - variable severity

- Blue sclera

- Bone fx with minimal trauma

- Dentinogenesis imperfecta (DI)

- Eventual hearing loss

Term
Dominant Negative Mutations
Definition

 Dominant mutated/altered gene product is more deleterious than having no gene product at all (null mutations)

 

ex. OI - defective pro-α collagen

Term
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
Definition

- X-Linked Recessive

- Very low reproductive fitness

Mutation:  very large deletion in Dystrophin gene @ Xp21 - results in defective dystrophin protein

 

Sxs:

- Progressive muscle weakness - proximal > distal

- (+) Gower's Sign - using hands pushing on knees to stand up

- Respiratory/cardiac muscles --> death from heart/respiratory failure

- Female manifesting heterozygotes with skewed X-inactivation --> weakness

Term
Becker Muscular Dystrophy
Definition

 

- X-Linked Recessive

- Relatively normal reproductive fitness

Mutation:  Dystrophin deletion or duplication - results in partially functional dystrophin protein

 

Sxs:

- Slowly progressive muscle weakness - proximal > distal

- Muscle pain with exercise; calf hypertrophy

- Less severe than DMD

- Female manifesting heterozygotes with skewed X-inactivation --> weakness

 

Term

α-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency

(α1ATD)

Definition

- Autosomal recessive

Mutations:

- Chromosome 14 - SERPINA1 gene

- Mutant Z allele (PI*Z- most common) - causes α1AT to accumulate intracellularly in hepatocytes (not secreted)

- PI*M, PI*S (normal alleles)

- PI*Mmalton, PI*Siiyama (mutant)

 

Sxs:

- COPD (early onset w/ smoking)

- Liver disease (usually in homozygous PI*ZZ)

Term
Hemoglobinopathy
Definition

Qualitative decline in hemoglobin

 

Mutation in nucleotide sequence produces abnormal protein 

Term

Hemoglobin

Fetal v. Adult

Definition

Fetal = 80% HbF = α2γ2

= 20% HbA   

 

Adult = 97% HbA = α2β2

= 2.5 % HbA2

 

- Shift from γ to β begins @ ~35 wks

Term
Thalassemia
Definition

Quantitative decline in hemoglobin

 

Mutation causes decrease/absence of a globin chain

 

Pathology due to imbalance in α:β ratio

Term
Sickle Cell Anemia
Definition

 - Autosomal Recessive

Mutation:

- GAG --> GTG(Glu --> Val) @ position 6 on HbA

- Creates HbS (abnormal protein)

- GAG --> AAG(Glu --> Lys) @ position 6 on HbA

- Creates HbC (milder form, well compensated)

 

Pathology:

- HbS aggregates inside RBCs - form inflexible rods that distort shape

- RBCs unable to squeeze through capillaries

- Decreased RBC lifespan

 

Sxs:

- ↓O2 delivery to tissues

- Chronic anemia, hepatosplenomegaly

- Sickling Crises - severe pain from reduced blood flow

 

Term
Sickle Cell Trait
Definition

- HbA/HbS (compound heterozygote)

 

- RBCs retain flexibility (enough HbA to compensate)

- No sickling crises - only pain with anoxia (usually leads to dx)

- Imparts heterozygote advantage for malaria

Term
β-Thalassemia
Definition

- Autosomal Recessive

- Mutation in β-globin (HBB) gene on chromosome 11 --> reduced synthesis

- Excess α-chains bind RBC membrane and form toxic aggregates

- Variable phenotypes

- Alleles: 

B = w.t.

Bo = no HbB synthesis

B+ = low level HbB synthesis

 

3 Forms:

1.) B-Thalassemia Major

2.) B-Thalassemia Intermedia

3.) B-Thalassemia Minor

Term
α-Thalassemia
Definition

- Autosomal Recessive

- Mutation of α-globins --> reduced synthesis

- Excess 

- Probably due to unequal CO

 

2 Forms:

1.) Hb Bart Hydrops Fetalis Syndrome

2.) Hb H Disease

 

Term

B-Thalassemia Major

(aka Cooley's Anemia)

Definition

- Homozygous mutant or compound heterozygous

(Bo/Bo, B+/B+ or B+/Bo)

- No HbB synthesis

 

Sxs:

- Severe microcytic anemia

- Iron overload

- Splenomegaly

- Marrow expansion

- Growth failure --> Death

 

Tx:

- Frequent RBC transfusion

 

Term
Hb Bart Hydrops Fetalis Syndrome
Definition

 

- A-Thalassemia

- Most severe - 4/4 α-globins are deleted

 

Sxs:

- Severe anemia

- Fetal edema, ascites, pericardial/pleural effusion

 

Dx: U/S @ 22-28 wk (13-14 wk with ↑ NT)

--> neonatal death

 

Term
Hb H Disease
Definition

- A-Thalassemia

- Deletion of mutation of 3/4 α-globin alleles

 

Sxs:

- Microcytic hemolytic anemia, hepatosplenomegaly

- Mild bone changes - 'hair-on-end' skull

 

--> compatible with survival to adulthood

Term
 B-Thalassemia Intermedia
Definition

- Homozygous milder mutant or compound heterozygous

(B+/B+ or B+/Bo)

- Low level HbB synthesis

 

Sxs:

- Intermediate sxs - mild anemia, etc.

- Complications with pregnancy and illness

 

Tx:

- Occasional RBC transfusion


Term
B-Thalassemia Minor/Trait
Definition

Heterozygous w.t./mutant

(B+/B or Bo/B)

- Moderate HbB synthesis

 

Sxs:

- Asymptomatic, possibly mild anemia

Term
Hemophilia
Definition

- X-linked recessive

- Deficiency or lack of clotting factors --> abnormal/prolonged hemorrhage

- High frequency of new mutations

 

Three Types:

1.) Hemophilia A (aka Classic Hemophilia)

2.) Hemophilia B (aka Christmas Disease)

3.) Hemophilia B Ledyen (rare)

 

- Skewed X-inactivation (Lyonization) can produce Affected Heterozygote females --> v. mild symptoms, if any

Term
Hemophilia A/Classic Hemophilia
Definition

- X-Linked Recessive

- Heterogenous mutation in Factor VIII gene - usually an inversion of Intron 22 (can also be insertion, deletion, frameshift, etc.)

 

Sxs:

- Hemorrhage into joints/muscles --> arthritis, necrosis

- Excessive wound bleeding

- Severity is proportional to Factor VIII levels

 

Tx:

- Frequent IV plasma Factor VIII supplementation

Term
Hemophilia B/Christmas Disease
Definition

 

- X-Linked Recessive

- Mutation in Factor IX gene

 

Sxs:

- Hemorrhage into joints/muscles --> arthritis, necrosis

- Excessive wound bleeding

 

Tx:

- IV plasma Factor IX supplementation

 

Term
Hemophilia B Leyden
Definition

 

- X-Linked Recessive

- Mutation in promoter region of Factor IX gene

 

Sxs:

- Excess bleeding in childhood

- Few episodes after puberty

 

Term
Somatic Mutation
Definition

- Acquired

- Cause cell damage, death or cause cancer

- Mutation is passed to daughter cells only (within same cell line)

- No vertical transmission of mutation to offspring

 

ex. UV rays --> melanoma of skin cells

ex. Philadelphia translocation of C22,9 --> CML in patient, not transmitted to offspring

Term
Germline Mutation
Definition

- Occurs in germ cells (sperm or ova)

- Transmitted to offspring with fertilization

- Mutation is present in all body cells of offspring

 

ex. Spermatogenic mutation introducing Osteogenesis Imperfecta --> afflicted offspring

 

*spermatogenesis introduces many opportunities for mutation*

Term
Single-BP Substitutions/Point Mutations
Definition

- Change of one AA can introduce:

 

1.) Missense Mutations - changes an AA in product

ex. Sickle Cell - Glu-->Val

2. Nonsense Mutations - introduces new stop codon

ex. CAG-->UAG

      (Glu)-->(stop)

3.) Silent Mutations - no effect on gene product

Term
Deletion/Insertion Mutations
Definition

3 base D/I --> protein contains -/+ one AA

- Can be problematic -

- ex. CF = ΔF508 Serine deletion

- this AA is crucial to translocation of CFTR to cell surface :: defective after mutation

2 base D/I --> frameshift; entire downstream structure is changed

1 base D/I --> frameshift; entire downstream structure changed

 

- Larger deletions can eliminate entire functional regions (ex. MD - large dystrophin deletion)

Term
Splice Variant Mutations
Definition

- Mutations (point/insertion/deletion) can introduce new splice sites in introns

 

ex. Thalassemia - single BP mutation creates an alternate splice acceptor site on HBB gene --> abnormal/absent HgB

Term
Gene Regulation Mutations
Definition

Mutations in:

 

- Promoter

- 3'-UTR

- 5'-Poly-A tail

 

Can change expression levels of a gene

Term
Transition Mutations
Definition

Single BP shift from

 

Purine --> Purine (A<->G)

OR

Pyrimidine --> Pyrimidine (C<->T)

Term
Transversion Mutation
Definition

Single BP shift from

 

Purine --> Pyrimidine

(or vice versa)

ex. A --> T

 

- Less common than transition mutations

Term
CpG Islands
Definition

- CG repeat regions involved in methylation

 

- 'Hotspots' of mutation where C --> T during replication

Term
Synonymous SNP
Definition

A single BP change that doesn't change the AA encoded by that codon

 

ex. CCA --> CCG

     Pro --> Pro

Term
Non-Synonymous SNP
Definition

A single BP change that affects what AA is coded for  in the DNA

 

ex. AGC --> GGC

    Ser --> Gly

Term
RFLP
Definition

- Highly sequence-specific cutting enzyme

 

:: can be used to detect SNPs at specific target sites

 

(will no longer cut if BP sequence has been changed   --> generates longer fragments than w.t.)

Term
Microsatellites/STRs/SSRs
Definition

STR = Short Tandem Repeat

SSR = Simple Sequence Repeat

 

- 1-6 bp repeated sequences

- Used in gene marking/RC mapping

- Variable # of repeats between individuals

--> used to determine paternity and for DNA identification 

(most useful RP length for DNA fingerprint is 4 BP)

Term
Structural Variations
Definition

Copy-Number Variant (CNV)- large segment exists multiple times in a genome compared to a reference

Copy-Number Polymorphism - a CNV that occurs in at least 1% of the population

Segmental Duplication - two or more copies of a segment within a genome (can also be CNVs)

Inversion - segment of DNA that is reversed in orientation compared to the rest of the genome

Translocation - change in position of a segment within a chromosome (doesn't change internal sequence of segment)

Term
Haplotype
Definition
A combination of alleles (or SNPs) at different places on a chromosome that are transmitted/inherited together
Term
Extragenic DNA
Definition

- VNTRs and STRs

- Transcriptionally inactive

- Involved in regulation of gene expression

Term
Triplet Expansion Disorders
Definition

Huntington's Disease

Myotonic Dystrophy

Fragile X Syndrome

Spinocerebellar Ataxia

Friedrich's Ataxia

 

Anticipation = number of repeats expands with each generation --> potential for earlier onset in offspring

Term
Structural Variations
Definition

Changes that involve segments > 1kB:

- Insertions
- Deletions
- Duplications (Copy-Number Variants, Segmental duplication)
- Inversions (pericentric or paracentric)
- Translocations


- Can interrupt or up-regulate gene expression depending on location/type of structural variation

ex. Insertion downstream from a constitutive promoter --> overexpression

ex. Duplication --> increased expression (multiple sites of transcription)

Term
Haplotype
Definition

A set of linked polymorphic genes that are inherited as a unit

 

- located at different loci on a chromosome

Term
Short-term Effects of DNA Damage
Definition

- G1 arrest by p53 (prevents cell cycle progression before DNA repair)

 

- Cell death if damage is extensive/cannot be repaired

Term
Long-Term Effects of DNA Damage
Definition

- Aging (normal)

 

- Cancer

Term
Sources and Effects of DNA Damage
Definition

1.) UV Light --> thymidine dimers 

2.) Radiation --> double-stranded breaks, ring chromosomes

3.) Cellular Metabolism (ex. ROS, normal aging effects)

4.) Chemical Exposure (ex. nitrous acid)

5.) Replication Errors

Term
Proofreading
Definition

DNA Pol I (prokaryotes) has 3'-5' exonuclease activity 

:: removes mis-paired base immediately after addition and replaces with correct base

Term
Base-Excision Repair
Definition

DNA repair of 1-5 nucleotide segments:

 

1.     Recognition of damage

2.     Removal of base

3.     Cleavage of strand at removal site

4.     Gap filling by DNA Polymerase using other strand as template

5.     Re-sealing by DNA Ligase

Term
Nucleotide Excision Repair
Definition

ex. to remove thymidine dimers caused by UV damage

 

DNA repair mechanism for 20-30 nucleotide segments:

 

1.     Recognition of dimer

2.     Removal of 20-30 bases

3.     Gap filling by DNA Polymerase using other strand as template

4.     Re-sealing by DNA Ligase

Term
Mismatch Repair
Definition

-  When mismatch occurs in daughter strand --> mismatch repair

system recognizes error

Can tell parent/daughter strand by methylation status (daughter

strand not yet methylated)

Corrects error based on parental template 

 

- Involves MSH2 and MLH1 proteins:

--> Mutations in these proteins causes HNPCC (hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer)

Term
Xeroderma Pigmentosum
Definition

Causes:

- Autosomal Recessive

- 100% penetrance

- Defect in nucleotide excision repair (20-30 bp segments)

- Locus heterogeneity (7 genes --> same phenotype)

 

Sxs:

- Increased sunburn, freckles, sun blisters

- Conjunctivitis

- Increased skin cancer risk

- Some neurological abnl

- Cumulative + irreversible DNA damage

Term
Bloom Syndrome
Definition

Causes:

- Autosomal Recessive

- 100% penetrance

- Mutation in BLM gene - C15q (DNA helicase) --> results in increase in double-stranded breaks/CO/RC events during mitosis

Sxs:

- Facial rash w/ sunlight exposure

- High incidence of early onset cancer (leukemia, lymphoma, virtually any organ; 50% before age of 20)

Tx:

Prevention of sun exposure

Cancer screening

Term

Ataxia Telangiectasia

(aka Louis-Bar Syndrome)

Definition

Causes:

- Autosomal Recessive

- 100% penetrant

- Mutation in ATM gene - C11q 

(ATM usually blocks cell division when DNA damage is present - similar to p53)

Sxs:

- Ataxia

- Telangiectasia (dilated small surface BVs)

- Increased cancer risk (lymphoma, leukemia, melanoma, breast, ovary, stomach)

- Heterozygote females show increased BRCA risk

Tx:

- Radiation = contraindicated

- X-rays only for Dx

- Frequent screening

Term

HNPCC

(hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer)

Definition

Causes:

- Autosomal dominant

- 90% penetrant

- Mutations in MSH2 and MLH1 (C2 and C3)

--> decreased mismatch repair = DNA damage

- Results in microsatellite instability

- 2% colon cancer cases

Sxs:

- Early onset (45yo)

- Proximal colon tumors

- Increased risk of extracolonic cancers (endometrial, ovary, stomach, urinary, etc.)

Dx:

- Use Amsterdam Criteria to determine genetic v. sporatic cause

 

Term
Amsterdam Criteria
Definition

 Used to determine likelihood of genetic causation in cancer (ex. HNPCC)

 

- Not diagnostic for genetic causation

 

Qualifications:

1.) 3+ relatives in 2+ generations with verified CRC

2.) At least one case is a 1st degree relative of another

3.) At least one case has onset by age 50

4.) Exclude FAP (familial adenomatous polyposis)

Term
Microsatellite Instability (MSI)
Definition

- Unstable short repeat regions

 

- Caused by failure of DNA repair

 

- Found in 95% HNPCC tumor cells

Term
BRCA1
Definition

- DNA repair gene found on C17q21

 

- Mutations linked to breast, ovarian cancer

- Autosomal Dominant inheritance

- 500+ mutations known: nonsense, missense, frameshift, splice-site

- High freq. in AJ populations (1/40 carrier for either BRCA1 or 2)

 

- Female BRCA lifetime risk = 56-85%

- Higher secondary female risk than BRCA2

- Lower male risk than BRCA2 (1-2%)

- Higher OVCA risk than BRCA2 (28-44%)

Term
BRCA2
Definition

 

- DNA repair gene found on C13q12

 

- Mutations linked to breast, ovarian cancer

- Autosomal Dominant inheritance

- 300+ mutations known: nonsense, missense, frameshift

- High freq. in AJ populations (1/40 carrier for either BRCA1 or 2)

 

- Female BRCA lifetime risk = 56-85%

- Lower secondary female risk than BRCA1

- Higher male BRCA risk than BRCA1 (5-10%)

- Lower OVCA risk than BRCA1 (10-37%)

 

Term

Cancer

(general characteristics)

Definition

- Multi-step process

- Loss of growth inhibition (contact, metabolic, etc.)

- Evasion of apoptosis

- Increased angiogenesis

- Loss of DNA repair function

 

:: Uncontrolled cell growth/division = tumor

Term
Oncogene
Definition
An activated proto-oncogene --> actively causing disease/cancer/tumor processes
Term
Proto-oncogene
Definition

- A normal gene that can become an oncogene due to

mutations or increased expression

Codes for proteins that help to regulate cell growth and

differentiation – encourage cell division

- Often involved in signal transduction and execution of mitogenic signals, usually through their protein products

 

Term
Tumor Suppressor Genes
Definition

Proteins that suppress mutations in proto-oncogenes that lead to accelerated cell division --> recognize and limit mutated cell division

 

ex. p53, Rb


- Mutations in tumor-suppressor genes that cause cancer are usually loss-of-function mutations

Term
Ras
Definition

- Cytosolic signal transduction protein (intracellular signaling)

- GTP-ase

 

- Mutation can lead to signaling errors --> cell overgrowth

Term
myc
Definition

- DNA binding transcription factor that facilitates progression from G1-->S

 

- Mutation can lead to over-expression - cell cycle progression even w/ DNA damage

 

- ex. amplified in BRCA

- ex. Burkitt Lymphoma - translocated to IgG gene --> overexpression

Term
APC
Definition
- Tumor suppressor gene
Term
ABL-BCR
Definition

- Mutant protein that causes CML

- Created by t(9,22) - (Philadelphia translocation)

- Places ABL protein downstream from promoter of BCR --> fusion protein with tyrosine kinase function (gain-of-function mutation)

 

-  Inhibited by Imaniteb mesylate

Term
BCL2
Definition

- Oncogene implicated in Follicular Lymphoma

 

- Anti-apoptosis factor --> mutation leads to overexpression and :: increased inhibition of apoptosis

Term
Herceptin
Definition

Ab that binds Her2 receptor on cell surface

 

:: EGF cannot bind Her2 receptor --> blocks downstream signaling for cell growth/DNA replication

 

- Used in combination with other drugs to treat BRCA

Term
Her2
Definition

= Human Epidermal GF-Receptor 2

 

- Membrane receptor

- EGF binds at surface --> protein signals cell to grow and divide

 

- Over-expressed at cell surface in BRCA tumor cells :: increased signaling for division (amplification mutation)

 

- Inhibited by Herceptin

Term
CML (Chronic Myeloid Leukemia)
Definition

- Caused by Philadelphia translocation (t(9,22))

 

- Mutation --> mutant fusion protein ABL-BCR with tyrosine kinase function that stimulates cell division

 

- Dx:  FISH detection of translocation

 

- Tx: Imaniteb mesylate - blocks TK and stimulates apoptosis in mutant cells

Term
Burkitt Lymphoma
Definition

- Translocation mutation t(8,14)

 

- Relocates c-MYC gene to IgG locus --> overexpression of MYC (TF that promotes cell cycle progression) --> increased cell division

Term
Follicular Lymphoma
Definition

- Mutation in BCL2 proto-oncogene

 

- Mutation results in over-expression of anti-apoptotic factor --> increased cell division

Term
Imaniteb mesylate
Definition

- Tx for CML

 

- Binds BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase as ATP-analog

- No phosphorylation of substrates can occur

 

:: inhibits uncontrolled cell division, promotes apoptosis

Term
p53
Definition

- Tumor suppressor gene

 

- Regulates cell-division and apoptosis by acting as a TF --> suppresses cell cycle promoters and expresses cell cycle inhibitors

 

-70-80% cancers exhibit p53 mutations

Term
Wilms Tumor Gene
Definition

- WT1

 

- Tumor suppressor gene

 

- Mutation leads to nephroblastoma (early onset kidney disease)

Term
Li-Fraumeni Syndrome
Definition

-Autosomal dominant

- Family of p53 mutations

 

- Variable expressivity --> affected individuals exhibit high rate of tumor development at a young age (ex. bone, breast, soft tissue, brain cancer, melanoma, etc.)

Term
Two-Hit Hypothesis
Definition

If 1st mutation is germline (i.e. inherited, present in all cells), 2nd (somatic/acquired) mutation is more likely to cause cancer

 

(Loss of Heterozygosity)

 

ex. Rb --> retinoblastoma

Term
Loss of Heterozygosity
Definition

Occurs in heterozygous mutant individuals (with germline mutation in one allele)

 

- Occurrence of a 2nd mutation (somatic) causes loss of heterozygous w.t. status --> now has 2 different mutations

 

 --> Loss of functional/w.t. allele (via deletion, unbalanced translocation, point mutation, etc.)

Term
Retinoblastoma
Definition

- Caused by two mutations in Rb (tumor-suppressor gene) - one in each allele

 

Mechanism:

1.) Germline mutation in Rb --> inherited in a dominant pattern

2.) Functions as a recessive allele - i.e. remaining functional allele can compensate

3.) Additional acquired/somatic mutation in w.t. Rb gene --> loss of Rb function completely --> disease phenotype

 

Sxs: early onset deteriorating vision, clouding of eyeballs

Term

FAP

(familial adenomatous polyposis)

Definition

- Autosomal dominant

- Mutation in APC gene - C5q (= tumor-suppressor gene)

+ mutations of other oncogenes (progressive)

 

Sxs:

- 100% lifetime CRC risk (90% by 45yo)

- 1000s of benign polyps

- Increased risk of extracolonic cancer

- CHRPE (congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigmented epithelium)

Term
Inherited Cancer
Definition

1st ‘hit’ in Two-Hit-Hypothesis was 

inherited/germline

Only takes one more mutation to cause loss of

both genes

High-risk

Indicators:

1. Young age of onset

2.  Multiple tumors

3.  BL tumors

4.  Autosomal dominant inheritance pattern

Term
Sporatic Cancer
Definition

- Two somatic mutations have occurred (2-hit hypothesis) to result in cancer

- Much less common

Term
Expression Array Analysis in Cancer
Definition

- Compare tumor and normal cell gene expression

 

- Can reveal:

- Pathogenesis/progression of tumor

- Differentiation genes

- Drugs sensitivity genes

- Risk factors

- Novel targets for therapy

Term
miRNA in tumorigenesis
Definition

- Small non-coding RNAs

- Regulate translation and degradation of mRNA

 

- Most cancers show altered miRNA expression/function (ex. epigenetic silencing of tumor-suppressing miRNA)

 

- Potential sites for disease markers/drug therapy

Term
Epigenetics in tumorigenesis
Definition

Examples:

  1. Deamination -->↑ rates of mutation
  2. UV absorption -->↑ rates of mutation
  3. Carcinogens -->↑ rates of mutation
  4. Methylation --> gene inactivation

ex. methylation of promoters of repair genes 

--> microsatellite instability, decreased DNA repair

Term
Recurrence Risk in Multifactorial Diseases
Definition
RR = square root of (I)
Supporting users have an ad free experience!