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Clinical Genetics Pediatric Residents Deborah Lyn, Ph.D Email: [email protected] Phone: 404-752-1521 November 2009 Family History is the First Step in Constructing a Pedigree Questions to consider: • Is the transmitted disease due to the inheritance (predisposition) of a cancer-related gene or chromosomal abnormality? • Does the pattern of transmission follow Mendelian mode of inheritance? Parent does not manifest cancer, but risk is passed to next generation. Single Gene Inheritance: (Monogenic) Nuclear Genome • Assumes a single gene defect. • Allelic frequency usually <0.1%. • Transmitted on autosomal, X or Y chromosome (follow Mendelian pedigree pattern). • Disease likely to be severe, occur at early age of onset. • Severity may depend on location of gene defect. • Complicated by environmental modifiers. Dominant inheritance: heterozygotes display phenotype Recessive inheritance: homozygotes display phenotype http://genetics.gsk.com Autosomal dominant diseases: Huntington’s, Myotonic Dystrophy, Marfan syndrome Inheritance of an Autosomal Dominant Disorder • Male to male transmission observed. • Ratios of affected offspring will give clues to mode of inheritance. • Heterozygotes will display the disease. recessive http://genetics.gsk.com Recessive traits: Sickle cell anemia Cystic fibrosis Phenylketonuria- mutation in phenylalanine hydroxylase. Autosomal Recessive (a) What is the probability of aa from Aa heterozygote parents? (b) All offspring will be Aa. X-Linked Disorders • X-linked disorders are notable for their expression in males. • Males always display disease when they inherit mutant gene. • X-linked dominant and recessive genes are only applicable in females. • Absence of father to son transmission, but daughters of a male with an X-linked trait must inherit the mutant gene. X-Linked Recessive Inheritance http://ordc.ohsu.edu/disease-information/inheritance Family with X-linked choroideremia, due to a mutation in the gene CHM, which is located on the X chromosome. The asterisk represents a mutation within that gene. http://genetics.gsk.com Menke’s disease [defect in copper transport] Hemolytic anemia (mutation in glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase). Punnett Square for X-Linked Recessive Inheritance Normal MotherХs Genotype Affected FatherХs Genotype XA Y X XXA XY A X XX XY Inheritance of an X-linked Dominant Disorder X-Chromosome Inactivation [implantation of embryo] Fig. 7.4 ©Scion Publishing Ltd Complication to X-Linked Inheritance X-Chromosome Inactivation Lyon Hypothesis • • • • One X chromosome in each cell is randomly inactivated in the embryonic development of females. (Paternal and maternal derived x chromosome will be inactivation in about half of the embryos’ cells). Compensate for gene dosage on X-chromosome between males and females. Inactivation is permanent once it is determined. In females, X chromosome exhibits somatic cell mosaics. Barr Body in females is due to a condensed heterochromatin structure (transcriptional inactive). • X-chromosome inactivation will affect disease severity, and complicate pattern of recessive inheritance. Turner’s Syndrome • Monosomy X chromosome: Xm (maternal) or Xp (paternal). • Barr body is not detectable. • No X-inactivation. • Intelligence usually normal, but impaired social competence and adjustment. Other Factors That Complicate Mendelian Patterns New Mutation • A child will be born with a disease for which there is no previous history of the disease in the family. New autosomal dominant mutation, appears to mimic an autosomal or X-linked recessive pattern. New Mutation • • • • Chromosomal abnormality (meiosis). Post-zygotic event (mitosis). New dominant mutation (altered protein structure). Sporadic change-tumor development - environmental exposure. • Exposure to viral infection. – Congenital rubella syndrome. • Exposure to teratogenic agent during pregnancy. – Fetal alcohol syndrome. – Neural tube defect. – Cigarette smoking (embryonic hypoxia). Exposure Within First Trimester Can Result in Craniofacial Malformations J Orofac Orthop (2007) 68: 266-277 Vitamin B6, B12 and folic acid: Role in One-carbon Transfer Reactions. • Purine, pyrimidine synthesis. • Cytosine methylation. • Methylation of histones. Germline Mosaicism Centre for Genetics Education. Http://www.genetics.edu.au Variable Expression • Severity of the disease can vary greatly - modified by environment, modifier genes (protein variants). • Heteroplasmic mitochondrial mutation. • Mosaicism (e.g. Due to X-chromosome inactivation). Uniparental Disomy (UPD) Inheritance of both autosomal chromosomes (or a segment) from the same parent. Impact observed in: • Genes regulated by genomic imprinting. • Mitochondrial inheritance. • Skew pattern of recessive inheritance. Uniparental Disomy (UPD) r r N N X r r N N X r N r r Heterozygote: No display of phenotype/disease Autosomal Recessive Trisomy rescue Homozygosity arises as a result of UPD Loss of Mendelian Principles-> even segregation and independent assortment of chromosomes. Single Gene Inheritance Mitochondrial Genome • Assumes a single gene defect. • Severity may depends on percentage of mitochondria bearing mutation (homoplasmy versus heteroplasmy). • Genome more vulnerable to mutations: higher incidence of acquired diseases associated with aging. • Diseases of cardiac and skeletal muscle are common-mitochondrial myopathies. • Diseases of nervous system. • Egg contributes most of the mitochondria to the zygote. Egg Contributes Most of the Mitochondria to the Zygote Inheritance of Variable Severity Oogenesis “Heteroplasmy” more than one population of mitochondrial DNA in the cell. Individuals harbor multiple copies of mitochondrial genome. Characteristics of Mitochondrial Inheritance • Mitochondrial disorders are inherited maternally. Both male and female offspring are affected, but affected males cannot transmit the disease. • Mutations in genes involved with oxidative phosphorylation. – Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (mutation in electron transport protein NADH-coenzyme Q). – Myoclonus Epilepsy Associated with Ragged-Red Fibers (MERRF) – Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy with Lactic Acidosis and Stroke-like Episodes (MELAS). • Homoplasmy and heteroplasmy mutations. Pedigree Showing Transmission and Expression of a Mitochondrial Trait [probably due to heteroplasmy] Note that transmission occurs only through females (circles). Multi-factorial Inheritance “One Gene One Phenotype” hypothesis is not applicable. Spectrum of human characters: from “Human Molecular Genetics by Strachan & Read. The Threshold Model for Multi-factorial Traits healthy disease Figure 15: Below the threshold, the trait is not expressed. Individuals above the threshold have the disease. [Figures from: www.uic.edu/classes/bms/bms655/gfx] Figure 18: Recurrence risk to first degree relatives of affected individuals. -Body mass index -Height -Blood pressure -Phenotype is present or absent. -Cleft lip, cleft palate. Phenotype is Combination of Genotypes + Epigenome + Environment Deviations From Expected Ratios May Be Due To: • Alleles show incomplete dominance or co-dominance. • Genes under investigation are closely linked on the same chromosome. • X-linked inactivation may result in manifesting heterozygote females. • Genetic interactions between different genes. • Trait is inherited on genetic material from only one parent. e.g. mitochondrial DNA is only inherited from the mother. • Gene is imprinted. Genetic Variation is More than a SNP Chromosomal Defects DiGeorge Syndrome • Deletion at chromosome 22q11. Variation in symptoms is related to the amount of genetic material lost. • CHARGE association (coloboma, heart defect, choanal atresia, growth or developmental retardation, genital hypoplasia, and ear anomalies, including deafness). • Cardiac and some speech impairments may be corrected surgically or therapeutically. • DGS gene is required for the normal development of the thymus (reduced T-cell function) and parathyroid gland. • “Complete DiGeorge anomaly" is used to describe infants who are athymic. Those with “typical” phenotype have low T-cell numbers. • Some success with thymus transplantation. Spontaneous Fetal Loss for Autosomal Trisomies Fig 3.1, Medical Genetics (1999) G.H. Sack, Jr. McGraw-Hill. Poor survival of trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome) and 18 (Edwards syndrome) conception, but no survival of trisomy 16. Maternal Age is Associated with Rise in Incidence in Trisomy http://www.bio.miami.edu/~cmallery/150/mendel/heredity.htm Robertsonian Translocation Non-Homologous Rearrangement Long arms of acrocentric chromosome fuse at centromere, short arms are lost. Down Syndrome due to Robertsonian Translocation Translocation trisomy Robertsonian translocation arises from fusion of long arms of chromosome 21 and 14 [46 t(14;21)]. Translocation Down syndrome • Accounts for 5% of cases. • Woman with balanced translocation have high recurrent risk of producing a second child with Down syndrome. • ROBs usually occur during meiosis and originate from a single parent. • Post-zygotic model would predict random translocation events. Patau Syndrome • Trisomy 13; 1/12,000 births. • Short life-span, mean survival is 95 days. Longer survival linked with heteromorphisms. • Clinical triad (microphthalmia/eye development disorder, cleft lip/palate, and polydactyly). Other facial deformities - abnormally small ears, small jar. • Non-cyanotic heart defects. • Intra-uterine growth retardation, single umbilical artery (evident on sonogram). • Associated with advanced age of parents. Patau Syndrome - Trisomy 13 Cytogenetic mosaicism - longer survival, variable expression. European Journal of Medical Genetics (2008) 51, July-August Fig. 1. Phenotypic aspects of the patient. The infant at birth (A) and at 12 years (B); pigmentary mosaicism on the back (C); feet (D). Linear white streaks are evident on both feet. Contiguous Gene Syndromes • Involves micro-deletions spanning multiple, adjacent genes positioned along a chromosome. • Require FISH (fluorescent in situ hybridization) for detection. • Imprinted genes usually located in cluster and harbor long range cis-acting DNA elements (imprint control element). • Outcome of a contiguous deletion of imprinted genes is dependent on the chromosomal parent of origin. Normal Embryos Can ONLY Arise When Maternal and Paternal Genomes Are Combined www.mcb.ucdavis.edu/.../chedin/research.htm Modified from Janine LaSalle Expression of Imprinted Genes • Haploid genome is not equivalent in regards to gene transcription. • Selective Expression/Transcription from either maternal or paternal allele. • Selective gene silencing from either maternal or paternal allele. Does not occur on every chromosome. • Occurs during gametogenesis. • Disease manifestation is dependent on allelic loss of normally transcribed gene. • Usually involved with development and post-natal growth. Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome (overgrowth disorder) CH3 Maternal IGF2 H19 CH3 Paternal IGF2 H19 transcription Normal Function Depends on Coordinated IGF2 (insulin-like growth factor2) and H19 (non-coding RNA) genes expression on chromosome 11p15.5. IGF2 gene is normally silenced on maternal chromosome. In BWS, biallelic expression of IGF2 gene; escape of epigenetic silencing. Silver Russell Syndrome Maternal CH3 IGF2 Paternal H19 Chromosome 11p15 CH3 IGF2 H19 transcription Epimutation is opposite to BWS. Biallelelic expression of H19 genes on both parental chromosomes, due to loss of methylation at imprint control region of H19. Reduced expression of IGF2. SRS-like condition is also due to loss imprint control on chromosome 7p. Silver Russell Syndrome Poor intrauterine growth: low birth weight, small for gestational age. Cranofacial features, triangular shaped face (pointed small chin), broad forehead. Body asymmetry of arms and legs. Fifth finger clinodactyly. Normal mental development. Expression of Paternal “A” Gene is Lost. Monoallelic Expression of Genes at 15q11-13 Deletion of paternally expressed genes -> Prader Willi syndrome. Deletion of maternally expressed genes -> Angelman syndrome Fig. 7.18 ©Scion Publishing Ltd Prader-Willi and Angelman syndrome Neurogenetic Disorders Caused by the Lack of a Paternal or a Maternal Contribution from Chromosome 15q11-q13. Fig 3.13, Medical Genetics (1999) G.H. Sack, Jr. McGraw-Hill. Prader-Willi Angelman 15q11-13 Genomic Imprint of PWS and AS Gene Clusters: Monoallelic Expression at Chromosome 15q Selective expression of genes from this chromosome Transcriptional silencing UDP: Uniparental Disomy IC: Imprint Control region ID: Imprint Deletion/Mutation in Regulatory Sequences Prader-Willi Syndrome • 1 in 10,000-1,25,000. • Fetal phenotype: fetal movement is diminished, amniotic fluid in lower range, abnormal fetal position, low birth weight. • At birth: hypotonic with difficult feeding, facial dysmorphism; difficulty establishing respiration. • Hypogonadism, may have undescended testes in males. • Misdiagnosed as Down syndrome, due to marked obesity. • Genetic test can distinguish chromosome difference, Methylation sensitive PCR, polymorphic markers can separate UPD. Prader-Willi Syndrome • Childhood: Excessive sleeping, failure to thrive, delayed milestones, speech delay. • Hyperphagia/ change in feeding from infancy. • Learning disability, but some cases of average intelligence. • Early intervention requires GH injections to support increased muscle mass and reduce food re-occupation. • Adolescence: Delayed puberty (girls have premature adrenarche), short stature, obesity, excessive eating. • Adult: Uncertain fertility outcome especially in boys. Prone to diabetes. • General: small hands and feet, high narrow forehead, excess fat, light skin and hair relative to other family members. Angelman Syndrome • Severe mental retardation. • Delayed motor development, absence of speech, lack of balance, jerky movements (“puppet”). • Excessive laughter. • Typical face: wide spread teeth, broad mouth, protruding tongue, and prominent chin. • Caused by loss of function of the imprinted UBE3A (ubiquitin ligase3A) gene. Summary del 15(q11-q13) del 15(q11-q13) Prader-Willi Syndrome AngelMan Syndrome 70% Paternal Deletion 25% Maternal Uniparental Disomy 5% Imprinting Defect 70% 4% 3-5% 1% 10% Maternal Deletion Paternal Uniparental Disomy Sequence mutation in UBE3A gene Chromosomal rearrangement Unknown Website from Univ. Florida http://www.peds.ufl.edu/divisions/genetics/teaching-resources.htm