Genetic Disorders

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Genetic Foundations - Code Breakers

  • Gene: Basic hereditary unit; DNA segment. Allele: Variant form of a gene.
  • Genotype: Genetic makeup. Phenotype: Observable traits.
  • Mutation: Permanent DNA sequence alteration. Types:
    • Point: Single base change.
    • Frameshift: Insertion/deletion, shifts reading frame.
    • Missense: Codes different amino acid.
    • Nonsense: Creates premature stop codon.
  • Penetrance: Proportion of individuals with genotype expressing phenotype.
  • Expressivity: Degree of phenotypic expression.
  • Genetic Disorder Types: Single gene (Mendelian), Chromosomal, Multifactorial, Mitochondrial. Types of DNA Mutations and Their Effects

⭐ Pleiotropy: one gene influences multiple phenotypic traits.

Mendelian Inheritance - Family Traits

  • Comparison of Mendelian Inheritance Patterns
FeatureAutosomal Dominant (AD)Autosomal Recessive (AR)X-linked Recessive (XLR)X-linked Dominant (XLD)
InheritanceVertical; affected parent has affected childHorizontal; skips generations; consanguinity commonDiagonal; no male-to-male transmission; carrier femalesVertical; no male-to-male; affected fathers have all affected daughters
Recurrence Risk (affected parent)50% (heterozygous parent)25% (carrier parents)Affected father: all daughters carriers, no sons affected. Carrier mother: 50% sons affected, 50% daughters carriers.Affected father: all daughters affected, no sons affected. Affected mother: 50% offspring affected.
Sex PredilectionEqualEqualMales > FemalesFemales > Males (often lethal in males)
ExamplesMarfan, Huntington, Achondroplasia, NF1Cystic Fibrosis, Sickle Cell, PKU, Tay-Sachs, AlbinismHemophilia A/B, Duchenne MD, G6PD deficiencyVitamin D-resistant Rickets, Rett Syndrome
-   *Variable Expressivity*: Trait severity varies (e.g., Neurofibromatosis 1).
-   *Incomplete Penetrance*: Not all individuals with genotype express phenotype (e.g., BRCA1/2).

📌 Mnemonic (AD): All Dominant Hereditary Maladies Need Attention (Achondroplasia, Huntington's, Marfan's, Neurofibromatosis, Adult Polycystic Kidney Disease).

Pedigree Chart Symbols and Patterns

⭐ New mutations are a significant cause of Autosomal Dominant disorders like Achondroplasia and Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (1/3rd of cases).

Chromosomal Chaos - Number Games

  • Numerical Abnormalities:
    • Aneuploidy (abnormal chromosome number):
      • Trisomies (2n+1): 📌 "Drinking at 21 (Down), Election at 18 (Edwards), Puberty at 13 (Patau)"
        • Down S. (Trisomy 21): Intellectual disability, flat facies, single palmar crease, Brushfield spots.
        • Edwards S. (Trisomy 18): Rocker-bottom feet, clenched hands, micrognathia, low-set ears.
        • Patau S. (Trisomy 13): Cleft lip/palate, polydactyly, microcephaly, holoprosencephaly.
      • Monosomy (2n-1): Turner S. (45,XO): Female; short stature, webbed neck, ovarian dysgenesis, coarctation of aorta.
    • Sex Chromosome Aneuploidy:
      • Klinefelter S. (47,XXY): Male; tall, gynecomastia, testicular atrophy, infertility.
  • Structural Abnormalities:
    • Deletions: Cri-du-chat S. (5p-): Cat-like cry, microcephaly, intellectual disability.
    • Translocations:
      • Robertsonian: Fusion of 2 acrocentric chr. (e.g., 13,14,15,21,22); can cause Down S.
      • Philadelphia Chr.: t(9;22) (BCR-ABL) → CML.

Karyotype showing trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)

⭐ Maternal age is the most significant risk factor for Trisomy 21.

Atypical Inheritance & Diagnosis - Tricky Genes & Tools

  • Multifactorial Inheritance: Multiple genes + environment (e.g., HTN, DM, Cleft lip/palate). Threshold model: liability must exceed threshold.
  • Non-Classic Inheritance:
    • Trinucleotide Repeats: Anticipation (earlier/severe onset). 📌 "Try Hunting for Fragile Myce": Huntington (CAG), Fragile X (CGG), Myotonic Dystrophy (CTG).
    • Mitochondrial: Maternal transmission (e.g., LHON). Mitochondrial Inheritance Pattern Diagram
    • Genomic Imprinting: Gene expression depends on parental origin (e.g., Prader-Willi/Angelman - del 15q11-13).
    • Gonadal Mosaicism: Germline mutation.
  • Diagnosis:
    • Tests: Karyotyping, FISH, PCR, Microarrays, NGS.
    • Prenatal: Amniocentesis, CVS, NIPT.

⭐ Fragile X syndrome is the most common inherited cause of intellectual disability.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Autosomal Dominant: Vertical transmission, 50% offspring risk; often structural protein defects (e.g., Marfan).
  • Autosomal Recessive: Horizontal transmission, 25% offspring risk; typically enzyme deficiencies (e.g., Cystic Fibrosis).
  • X-Linked Recessive: Primarily affects males; carrier females; no male-to-male transmission (e.g., Duchenne).
  • Mitochondrial Inheritance: Exclusively maternal transmission to all offspring; affects high ATP-demand tissues.
  • Trinucleotide Repeat Disorders: Exhibit anticipation; severity ↑ with generations (e.g., Huntington, Fragile X).
  • Genomic Imprinting: Gene expression depends on parental origin (e.g., Prader-Willi/Angelman - 15q deletion).

Practice Questions: Genetic Disorders

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which of the following translocations is not associated with Down syndrome?

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Flashcards: Genetic Disorders

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_____ coined the term cellular pathology

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ coined the term cellular pathology

Rudolf Virchow

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