Title: Medical Genetics 1
1Medical Genetics 1
- Prof Duncan Shaw
- http//www.abdn.ac.uk/gen155/djshome.html
2Major Groups of Clinical Disorders with a Genetic
Contribution
- Single gene defects
- Chromosomal abnormalities
- Congenital malformations
- Multifactorial diseases - most common causes of
illness
3Autosomal recessive inheritance
- Cystic fibrosis (1/2000)
- Recessive mental retardation (1/2000)
- Congenital deafness (1/5000)
4Increased risk in autosomal recessive disease
- Consanguinity if parents are related
(consanguinity) there is an increased risk that
both parents carry the same recessive allele
5Ethnic associations with AR disease
- In particular populations, recessive allele
frequency may have increased by selection in
heterozygotes, or by genetic drift - ?-Thalassaemia Cypriots, Greeks, Italians,
Chinese, African-Americans - Sickle Cell Disease Arabs, West Indians
- Tay-Sachs Disease Ashkenazi Jews (4 carriers)
- Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Syndrome Apache
Native Americans - Cystic Fibrosis Caucasians
6Finding the cystic fibrosis gene
- CF gene was found using positional cloning
- Linkage to markers on chromosome 7
- But that didnt get closer than several Mb
still lots of genes - To narrow the candidate region further, used
linkage disequilibrium..
7Linkage and linkage disequilibrium
- Linkage is tested within families, LD by
population study - This marker is linked to the disease, but to
different alleles (of the same marker gene) in
each family
8How LD arises
9LD and haplotypes
- Haplotype the set of alleles carried by an
individual chromosome - With N bi-allelic markers, expect 2N possible
haplotypes in population, because recombination
creates all possible combinations of alleles - If fewer than 2N haplotypes are observed, this is
evidence for LD - Previous example A1/A2 and CF/N gives 4
haplotypes with recombination, or 3 with LD
10Testing for LD
c2 test for significance
11LD operates over short genetic distances
1
LD
0
-5000
-100 0 100
5000
Distance (kb) from disease gene
12Use of LD for gene mapping
- A gene can be mapped by linkage in families to
within a few cM ( a few Mb in humans) - If all or most cases of the disease are descended
from a unique mutation, LD will be observed with
markers about 100kb or less from the gene much
closer than you can get using linkage alone - In CF, about 70 of mutations are the same
(DF508) and these show LD with markers very close
to the CF gene this helped the gene to be
identified
13Autosomal dominant inheritance
- An affected person usually has one affected
parent - Transmitted by either sex
- Child of an affected parent is at 50 risk of
also being affected
14Autosomal Dominant Diseases
- Disease Frequency/1000 births
- Otosclerosis 3
- Familial hypercholesterolaemia 2
- Adult polycystic kidney disease 1
- Multiple exostoses 0.5
- Huntingtons disease 0.4
15Multiple exostoses
16The ear
17Comparisons between AD and AR
- Dominant
- Expressed in heterozygote
- Approx. 1/2 offspring affected
- Equal frequency and severity in each sex
- Paternal age effect on rate of new mutation
- Variable expressivity
- Recessive
- Expressed in homozygote
- Low risk to offspring
- Equal frequency and severity in each sex
- New mutations rare
- Constant expressivity in each family
- Importance of consanguinity
18Revision of linkage and Lod scores
- Affecteds have A marker allele from Dad,
unaffecteds have B - If random, would expect 5050 distribution
- Evidence for linkage?
19Revision of linkage and Lod scores (2)
- If marker and disease were unlinked, probability
of this pedigree (1/2)4 1/16 0.0625 - If they are linked with RF 0.1 (10
recombination), probability of pedigree (0.9)4
0.66 and odds ratio (relative to no linkage)
0.66/0.0625 10.56 - If they are linked with RF 0.0, probability of
pedigree (1)4 1 and odds ratio (relative to
no linkage) 1/0.0625 16 - To combine information from several families,
take log10 of odds ( LOD score) and add them up - LOD gt 3 good evidence for linkage LOD lt -2
evidence against linkage -2 lt LOD lt 3 is
inconclusive