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Examples of Chromosomal or Mendelian Disorders. Trisomies 16 most common in spontaneous lost pregnancies, does not survive to birth 21,18,13 Sex Chromosomes Turner Vs Noonan Klinefelter Dominant Structural Protein Disorders X-linked disorder. Clinical features of DS 1. Physical
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Examples of Chromosomal or Mendelian Disorders • Trisomies • 16 most common in spontaneous lost pregnancies, does not survive to birth • 21,18,13 • Sex Chromosomes • Turner • Vs Noonan • Klinefelter • Dominant Structural Protein Disorders • X-linked disorder
Clinical features of DS 1 • Physical • Characteristic flat facies, oblique palpebral fissures, epicanthal folds, • Dysplastic ear, narrow palate, abnormal teeth, protruding tongue • Cardiac malformations (40%) • Gastrointestinal obstruction, duodenal atresia, Hirschsprung disease • Premature aging, Alzheimer-like symptoms in 40s • Hypotonia, palmar/digital anomalies • Male sterility
Clinical features of DS 2 • Mental retardation • IQ 75 if mother has >16 years of schooling • IQ 30 if both parents have <12 years of schooling • Some selective deficits in rule-based systems such as numbers and grammar • May be able to function with minimal assistance
Clinical features of DS 3 • Hearing 40% • Thyroid dysfunction 25-30x general population • Increased risk of Diabetes mellitus • Leukemoid response or congenital leukemia • Increased risk of ALL, AML and ANLL • 10-100 x general population • Immunodeficiency
Trisomy 21 Facts • Heart defects may not be apparent at birth • sensitivity of PE: 61-74% • ECG improves sensitivity by 15% • Echo is needed • 19/52 have normal PE and significant intracardiac defect at birth • Survival in DS without heart disease is 99% at one year
Trisomy 21 • About 70% of conceptions are lost • 20% between 16 weeks and term • 20% between 10 and 16 weeks • Maternal non-disjunction in 86% • 75% are meiosis I errors • Paternal origin 9% almost equal MI and MII • Somatic mutations 5%
Clinical Features Trisomy 18 • Prenatal onset Growth Retardation • Single umbilical artery • Prominent occiput, lowset, malformed auricles, short palpebral fissures,small mouth • Clenched hand, overlap of 2nd on 3rd and 5th on 4th finger • Cardiac (VSD, ASD, ductus), Renal, GU (cryptorchidism, hypoplastic labia), Skeletal, Abdominal anomalies • Early demise: 60% first 2 months, 90% by one year.
Clinical features Trisomy 13 • Holoprosencephaly, defects of optic and olfactory nerves • Microcephaly with sloping forehead • Defects of eyes • Cleft lip and/or palate • Scalp defect: aplasia cutis at vertex • Cardiac defects (80%) VSD, PDS,ASD • Polydactyly, prominent heel, flexion deformities, abnormal creases • 5% survive the first 6 months, median survival 2.5 days
Clinical Features of Turner Syndrome 1 • Congenital lymphedema • Puffy feet and hands • Leads to the ‘webbed neck’ • Low posterior hair line • Absence of secondary sex characteristics • Scanty axillary or pubic hair • Lack of breast development • Amenorrhea • Streak gonads/rudimentary ovaries • Infertility • Mosaicism
Clinical Features of Turner Syndrome 2 • Short stature • Coarctation of the aorta • Renal anomalies (40%) • Normal intelligence • Short metacarpal IV • Multiple pigmented nevi • Facial features: downturned mouth, narrow palate, small mandible • 99% fetal losses of X fetuses • 2-4% all concepti but 1/5000 live births
Noonan syndrome • Short Stature 50% • Turner-like features: sternum, neck, cubitus valgus • Hypertelorism, ptosis, down-slanting palpebral fissures • Pulmonary stenosis, cardiomyopathy • Normal chromosomes • Either sex; AD, mutations in PTPN11, a gene encoding the non-receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2 in 50% , 12q24.1 • Variable fertility (cryptorchidism) • Bleeding diathesis in 1/3 • Mental retardation 25%
XXY: Klinefelter Syndrome • May have mental retardation • Growth • Tendency for long limbs • Height mean 75th centile • Hypogonadism • Childhood • Adolescence/adult • Small testicular volume • Inadequate testosterone production • Infertility • Fibrosis/hyalinization of seminiferous tubules • Gynecomastia in 25-50% • Normal sexual functioning
Dominant disorders of Structural Proteins • Marfan • ocular, skeletal, cardiac disease • chromosome 15q21.1 • defect in fibrillin-1 • effect on elastic fibers as disruption of microfibrillar component • elastin unaffected • Osteogenesis imperfecta • collagen defect • skeletal system; sclera • AD and AR forms; type II lethal as neonate
Dominant disorders of Structural Proteins 2 • Ehlers-Danlos • defect in collagen synthesis or assembly • synthesized as precursor; hydroxylated; glycosylated; assembled; secreted; cleaved; aggregation; cross-linked • Hyperextensibility of joints and of skin, altered wound healing and scar formation • Premature rupture of membranes/premature birth • Skin, cardiac, vascular, joint, ocular, hollow viscera • multiple types
Defects in Receptor Proteins • Familial Hypercholesterolemia • Autosomal dominant • heterozygotes manifest disease signs milder and later than homozygotes • LDL receptor defects • type 1 no receptors; type 2 dysfunctional binding at receptors; type 3 internalization defect • decreased transport of LDL cholesterol into cells; upregulation of hepatic cholesterol synthesis • early onset atherosclerosis • hypercholesterolemia 12-25mMol 500-1000mg/dl • xanthomas, corneal arcus • early death • Gene Therapy
Single Gene, Multiple Mutations • Cystic Fibrosis • Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) • Acts as chloride channel • Reduced chloride transport (and water) • increased sweat electrolytes • viscous secretions • Chronic lung disease, pancreatic insufficiency, hepatic disease • Autosomal recessive gene at 7q31 • Many mutations; D F508 is the most common
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome • Spasticity after 4-6 months of age • Choreoathetosis • Self-mutilation despite pain sensation intact • Mental retardation usually mild • Articulation defects / autistic features • Growth deficiency • Uric acid stones which leads to renal failure • Hypoxanthine-Guanine PhosphoRibosylTransferase deficiency mutations range from point to deletions
One Gene Many Diseases • Chromosome 17, PMP22 gene; peripheral myelin protein • Duplication of PMP22 1.5 Mb (3 copies) gives AD Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease Type 1 • Deletion (1 copy) is Hereditary Neuropathy with Liability to Pressure Palsies • Point mutations are Dejerine-Sottas syndrome characterized by distal muscle weakness, sensory alterations, muscle atrophy and enlarged spinal nerve roots
Cystic Fibrosis Sickle Cell Disease Thalassemias Hemophilias Huntington Chorea Gain of function Post-axial Polydactyly Retinoblastoma Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Disease Familial Isolated Growth Hormone Deficiency Dominant negative Thyroid Binding Globulin deficiency X-linked Neurofibromatosis type 1 50% new mutations ‘Common’ Single Gene Defects