Title: Human Genetics Basics
1Human Genetics Basics
- Kate Garber
- Director of Education
- Department of Human Genetics
- kgarber_at_genetics.emory.edu
2Medical Genetics
- Syndrome named after an old guy
- Gene name, which is some meaningless abbreviation
- Pathway
- Genetic test
3Variable Human Traits
Qualitative Traits Discrete traits Receding
hairline Bushy eyebrows Gray hair
Quantitative Traits Measurable traits IQ Blood
pressure Height
4Genes versus Environment
Rare Simple genetics High recurrence risk
Common Complex genetics Low recurrence risk
Sickle cell disease
Scurvy Infectious diseases Gunshot wound
Hypertension Heart disease Diabetes Asthma Behavio
ral disorders
5Why might someone want to seek genetic services?
- Get information about their family history and
any genetic risk factors - The diagnosis of a genetic disorder by physical
examination and/or genetic laboratory testing - How/why a disorder occurred (in most cases)
- The chance for the disorder to reoccur in the
family - The chance for other family members to have the
disorder or pass it on - The management and treatment of the disorder
- Support groups for the disorder
- Connections to other families who have a child
with a similar/same disorder
6- Types of genetic testing
- 1. Diagnostic testing - establish or confirm a
diagnosis - 2. Carrier testing - screen adults to determine
if they are carriers of mutations so that their
risk of having a child with a genetic defect can
be calculated - 3. Prenatal testing - determine if a fetus is
affected with a genetic disorder (also includes
PGD testing). - 4. Presymptomatic testing - determine if a
currently asymptomatic individual will become
affected with a genetic disease in the future. - 5. Population screening - screening of the entire
population for a genetic disorder so that these
individuals can be identified and treated before
the onset of symptoms
7Chromosome Variation
- Karyotype
- 23 pairs autosomes, 2 sex chromosomes
- Each chromosome has a characteristic banding
pattern - What is the most common genetic variation you see
in karyotypes from a normal population?
46, XX versus 46, XY
8Variation in Chromosome Number
- Trisomies 13, 18, and 21 are the only non-mosaic
trisomies for an entire autosome that are
compatible with postnatal survival - Monosomy X is the only monosomy that is viable
Trisomy 13
Trisomy 18
Turnpenny Ellard, 2007
9Variation in chromosome structure
- Translocations
- Inversions
- Duplications
- Deletions
10- Chromosome abnormalities
- microscopically visible changes in the number or
structure of chromosomes occur in - Approximately 1 of all live births
- 23 of congenital anomalies with MR
- 13 of congenital heart defects
- 60 of spontaneous first trimester abortions
- Examples
- Down syndrome - caused by an additional copy of
chromosome 21 - Unbalanced translocations - partial monosomy for
one region of the genome and partial trisomy for
another region of the genome - 22q11.2 deletion interstitial deletion of 3Mb
removing several genes
11When to order cytogenetic testing (i.e. standard
of care) Multiple congenital anomalies Mental
retardation of unknown origin or associated with
minor or major malformations Multiple
unexplained spontaneous abortions Ambiguous
genitalia Prenatal testing Abnormal prenatal
screen Ultrasound abnormalities
12Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH)
G A T T
Metaphase cell
Denatured probe DNA
Denatured target DNA ds ssDNA
13FISH probes
Unique sequence probes - single copy probes (1 kb
feasible). Useful for microdeletions/dups,
specific telomeres.
A shows a normal chromosome 15 B shows a
deletion at the end of the other chromosome 15
14Copy Number Polymorphism
- Large chunks of DNA (1000s-1 Mb) that are present
in a variable number of copies in different
people - Can affect the number of copies of a gene that
are present in a person - Even if they dont contain a complete gene, they
can affect the level of gene expression
15Comparative Genome Hybridization
- Fragments of sample and reference DNA labeled
with different fluorescent dyes - Labeled DNAs are denatured and incubated with
metaphase chromosomes or on DNA arrays - The DNAs compete for binding to the target DNA
- Resulting relative fluorescence is measured
- If theres an equal sequence between sample and
reference,you get a yellow signal. If not you get
red or green.
16Indications for array CGH
- Patients with normal chromosome analysis and
- Unexplained developmental delay or mental
retardation - Dysmorphic features or congenital anomalies
- Autism spectrum disorders, seizures, or a
clinical presentation suggestive of a chromosomal
syndrome - Patients with a previously identified chromosome
abnormality - To size deletions or duplications and identify
genes involved - For apparently balanced rearrangements and an
abnormal clinical phenotype, oligo array analysis
can be used to test for cryptic
deletions/duplications at the breakpoints
17Changes to DNA sequence
- CTCGAGGGGCCTAGACATTGCCCTCCAGAGAGAGCACCCAACACCCTCCA
GGCTTGACCGGCCAGGGTGTCCCCTTCCTACCTTGGAGAGAGCAGCCCCA
GGGCATCCTGCAGGGGGTGCTGGGACACCAGCTGGCCTTCAAGGTCTCTG
CCTCCCTCCAGCCACCCCACTACACGCTGCTGGGATCCTGGATCTCAGCT
CCCTGGCCGACAACACTGGCAAACTCCTACTCATCCACGAAGGCCCTCCT
GGGCATGGTGGTCCTTCCCAGCCTGGCAGTCTGTTCCTCACACACCTTGT
TAGTGCCCAGCCCCTGAGGTTGCAGCTGGGGGTGTCTCTGAAGGGCTGTG
AGCCCCCAGGAAGCCCTGGGGAAGTGCCTGCCTTGCCTCCCCCCGGCCCT
GCCAGCGCCTGGCTCTGCCCTCCTACCTGGGCTCCCCCCATCCAGCCTCC
CTCCCTACACACTCCTCTCAAGGAGGCACCCATGTCCTCTCCAGCTGCCG
GGCCTCAGAGCACTGTGGCGTCCTGGGGCAGCCACCGCATGTCCTGCTGT
GGCATGGCTCAGGGTGGAAAGGGCGGAAGGGAGGGGTCCTGCAGATAGCT
GGTGCCCACTACCAAACCCGCTCGGGGCAGGAGAGCCAAAGGCTGGGTGT
GTGCAGAGCGGCCCCGAGAGGTTCCGAGGCTGAGGCCAGGGTGGGACATA
GGGATGCGAGGGGCCGGGGCACAGGATACTCCAACCTGCCTGCCCCCATG
GTCTCATCCTCCTGCTTCTGGGACCTCCTGATCCTGCCCCTGGTGCTAAG
AGGCAGGTAAGGGGCTGCAGGCAGCAGGGCTCGGAGCCCATGCCCCCTCA
CCATGGGTCAGGCTGGACCTCCAGGTGCCTGTTCTGGGGAGCTGGGAGGG
CCGGAGGGGTGTACCCCAGGGGCTCAGCCCAGATGACACTATGGGGGTGA
TGGTGTCATGGGACCTGGCCAGGAGAGGGGAGATGGGCTCCCAGAAGAGG
AGTGGGGGCTGAGAGGGTGCCTGGGGGGCCAGGACGGAGCTGGGCCAGTG
CACAGCTTCCCACACCTGCCCACCCCCAGAGTCCTGCCGCCACCCCCAGA
TCACACGGAAGATGAGGTCCGAGTGGCCTGCTGAGGACTTGCTGCTTGTC
CCCAGGTCCCCAGGTCATGCCCTCCTTCTGCCACCCTGGGGAGCTGAGGG
CCTCAGCTGGGGCTGCTGTCCTAAGGCAGGGTGGGAACTAGGCAGCCAGC
AGGGAGGGGACCCCTCCCTCACTCCCACTCTCCCACCCCCACCACCTTGG
CCCATCCATGGCGGCATCTTGGGCCATCCGGGACTGGGGACAGGGGTCCT
GGGGACAGGGGTCCGGGGACAGGGTCCTGGGGACAGGGGTGTGGGGACAG
GGGTCTGGGGACAGGGGTGTGGGGACAGGGGTGTGGGGACAGGGGTCTGG
GGACAGGGGTGTGGGGACAGGGGTCCGGGGACAGGGGTGTG
1 change every 1,000 bases 99.9 identical
from person to person
18What is the effect of a DNA change?
19DNA change can lead to different results
Deleterious
???
mutation
polymorphisms
Neutral variation
height, weight response to certain drugs, hair,
skin, eye color
Inborn errors of metabolism, cystic fibrosis,
sickle cell anemia, cancer
20Mutation can occur in different places across a
gene
1 2 3 4 5
X
X
X
X
promoter
21Clinicians often dont use pedigrees
- Although there are several obstacles, ... a
common underestimation by clinicians of the value
of the family history,
Blue 57 - no significant family hx Red 33 -
one chronic condition Yellow 8 - two Pink 2
- three or more
- (3) Scheuner, et al. Am J Med Genet 1997,
71315-324.
22Pedigree vs. Questionnaire
- Focus on individuals by asking about each person
in family - Trigger patient memory
- Easier to see patterns
- Use to explain patterns
- Demonstrates biological relationships
- Amount of genetic information shared
- Reveals social relationships
23Family history can provide the basis for
- Making a diagnosis
- Determining who is at risk and level of risk
- Assessing needs for education and psychosocial
support
24Rules
- Squares for males
- Circles for females
- Relationship line (horizontal) connects
partners double slash equals separation - Line of descent (vertical)
- Sib-ship line (horizontal)
25Information to collect
- Initials or first name particularly affected
- Ages or dates (year) of birth
- Decades for adult onset concerns okay
- Unaffected just as important as affected
- If affected, note age of onset
- Deceased slash age and cause include lost
pregnancies
26More information to collect
- Physical and mental health of each individual
- Birth defects, developmental delay, mental
retardation, inherited disorders, chronic
conditions? - Build key shading, patterns, etc.
- Watch abbreviations add to key as you go
- Date pedigree, Where and who collected
- Who reported information - Historian
27What to look for
- Early age of onset
- Multiple affecteds
- Individuals who are affected multiple times
- Particular constellations of features
- Pattern of inheritance
- Mental retardation/
- developmental delay
- Birth Defects
- Obvious genetic conditions
- Infertility/miscarriage
2890
82
Dx 48 d. 50
82
63
62
60
Dx 42 58
61 Type 2 diabetes Dx. 45
28
35 33 30
Breast cancer
2990
82
Dx 75 d. 77
Dx 76 80
Dx 68 d. 75 MI
63
62
60
58
28
35 33 30
Breast cancer
3090
d. 86 Prostate ca
d. 35 Car accident
Dx 54 d. 78
70
63
d. 40 MI
60
58
Dx 51 51
28
35 33 30
Breast cancer
31- Autosomal Dominant
- Responsible gene on autosome
- Only 1 copy of mutation needed - normal allele
not sufficient to compensate for mutant allele - Heterozygotes and homozygotes are both affected
32Characteristics of Autosomal Dominant Disorders
- appears in every generation
- each affected person has an affected parent
(exceptions!) - each child of an affected parent has 50 risk to
inherit trait. - unaffected family members dont transmit
phenotype to children (exceptions again). - males and females equally likely to transmit the
trait, to children of either sex. - male-to-male transmission
- new mutations relatively common
33- Autosomal Recessive
- Responsible gene on autosome
- Both alleles of the gene must be defective.
- Frequently due to loss of function (gene is
inactivated) - Heterozygotes are unaffected carriers
Medium chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD)
34Characteristics of Autosomal Recessive Disorders
- If disorder appears gt1 family member, typically
found within a sibship, not across generations. - The recurrence risk for each sib of the proband
is 25. - More common with consanguinity, especially for
rare diseases. - Males and females are equally likely to be
affected. - New mutation is almost never a consideration.
35- Sex-Linked
- Responsible gene on X chromosome (also called
X-linked) - Usually for females, both copies of the X
chromosome must be affected - Males, hemizygous for the X chromosome, much more
likely to be affected
X-linked mental retardation
36Genetics and Prenatal Care
- Diagnostic Tests
- Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS)
- Amniocentesis
- Testing for single gene defects
- Screens
- Combined first trimester screen
- Triple screen/Quad screen
37Genetics and Prenatal Care
- Diagnostic Tests
- Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS)
- Amniocentesis
- Screens
- Combined first trimester screen
- Triple screen/Quad screen
Is 35 a magic age cut-off for screening versus
testing?
38From Thompson Thompson Genetics in Medicine
39For an autosomal recessive disorder, what is the
family history likely to be?
40Carrier Testing
The frequency of Tay-Sachs (prior to the onset of
widespread carrier screening among Ashkenazim )
was about 1/360,000 live births for
non-Ashkenazi North Americans, and 1/3,600
for North American Ashkenazi Jews Carrier
frequencies are therefore about 1/300 for
most North Americans, and 1/30 for North
American Ashkenazi Jews
And within a certain population, particular
mutations tend to predominate
41Carrier Testing
- Ashkenazi Jewish
- Tay-Sachs
- Canavan Disease
- 1 in 40
- Gaucher Disease
- 1 in 13
- Familial Dysautonomia
- 1 in 30
- Cystic fibrosis
- 1 in 25
- Fanconi anemia
- 1 in 90
- Niemann-Pick Disease
- 1 in 90
- Bloom syndrome
- 1 in 100
- African Americans
- Sickle cell disease
- 1 in 10
- Caucasians
- Cystic fibrosis
- 1 in 25
What does a negative result tell you?
42For an autosomal recessive disorder, what is the
family history likely to be?
43Newborn Screening
44Newborn Screening WHY ?
- Detect an affected infant before before symptoms
to prevent or reduce morbidity and mortality - Provide parents and family reproductive options
for future pregnancies - Avoid diagnostic odyssey
45http//genes-r-us.uthscsa.edu
46www.acmg.net/resources Look under reference
materials
47Algorithm for MCAD positive newborn screen
48MCAD ACT Sheet
49Adults who might seek genetic services
- Those with reproductive problems
- Those with a known genetic disorder in the family
- Those with symptoms of a genetic disorder
- Those with family history of cancer
50Case Study
- At the time of her annual physical, your patient,
a 30-year old woman, asks about the breast
cancer gene. She is Jewish and has been reading
in the paper that Jewish women may be more likely
to have this gene. She has two older sisters,
aged 33 and 35, who are also worried about their
risks.
51Cancer risk assessment
Sporadic cancer
Familial cancer
Red Flags
Hereditary cancer
Early onset cases Individuals affected with
multiple tumors Particular patterns of
tumors Breast and ovarian
5290
82
Dx 48 d. 50
82
63
62
60
Dx 42 58
61 Type 2 diabetes Dx. 45
28
35 33 30
Breast cancer
53Genetic testing for BRCA1/2
- All testing in North America performed by a
single lab, Myriad - Exons and adjacent regions sequenced. Also look
for large duplications and deletions.
Mutation-specific testing is also available. - Possible results
- Mutation positive
- Mutation negative (known mutation in family)
- Variant of unknown significance (This happens
10 of the time) - No mutation found
- Preferable procedure is to do test on an affected
family member first
54If our patient tests negative for a BRCA1/2
mutation, what are the possible explanations?
- No BRCA1/2 mutation in the family
- Increased risk
- She didnt inherit the mutation in the family
- Population risk (1 in 8)
- There is a mutation in our patient but we cant
detect it using our testing method. - High risk
- How can we avoid some of this confusion?
- Identify a familial mutation
- Try to test aunt first or test archived tissue
sample from grandmother, if available.
55What if the test is positive?
- Provide psychosocial support
- Review cancer risks and management options
- Identify at-risk relatives
- Plan for follow-up
56Cancer risks with BRCA mutations
www.myriad.com
57Personal risk reduction following BRCA1/2
mutation detection
- Increased surveillance
- Selective estrogen receptor modulators
(tamoxifen) - Prophylactic mastectomy
- Prophylactic oophorectomy (usually recommended)
Finch et al. (2006) JAMA 286185-192
58ASCO Guidelines for Hereditary Cancer Testing
- Cancer predisposition testing should be offered
only when - There is a personal or family history suggesting
a genetic susceptibility to cancer - The test can be adequately interpreted
- The test result will aid in diagnosis or
influence medical management of the patient or
family members
59Why might somebody who has already had cancer
want genetic testing?
- They would be at increased risk of other
additional primary tumors - Could influence patient management
- Could help family members
60Genetic counseling/risk assessment
- When a patient is not interested in or is not a
good candidate for cancer genetic testing,
genetic counseling and risk assessment are still
valuable when there is - A suggestive pattern of cancers in the family or
individual - High anxiety
- A mixture of cancers in the family (suggestive of
a cancer syndrome)
61Mendelian versus complex traits
- Mendelian traits
- Are determined by the independent action of a
single major gene - Mutation in this gene is necessary and sufficient
for phenotype - Have predictable inheritance patterns
Cystic fibrosis
Risk to each sib is 25 and we can do prenatal
testing
62Mendelian versus complex traits
- Complex traits
- Exhibit familial clustering but not predictable
inheritance patterns
Cleft palate
Recurrence risk is 3 (compared to population
risk of 0.1)
63Benefits to determining genetic factors that
influence a complex trait
- Provide a molecular definition of the trait
- Improve understanding of disease etiology and
mechanism - Can offer early risk assessment
- Aids in discovery of new, targeted drugs
- Can be utilized for disease prevention
64How do we find genes for complex traits?
65Association studies
- Search for the occurrence of specific genetic
variation at a higher frequency among affected
individuals compared to unaffected individuals - Strength of association is measured by an odds
ratio - we identified a variant in the CDKAL1 gene that
was associated with T2D in individuals of
European ancestry (odds ratio (OR) 1.20)
Steintorsdottir et al. (2007) - In contrast to studies of Mendelian traits in
which you look for mutations throughout a gene
that that are inherited with a trait, association
studies look for one specific allele that is
overrepresented in the case population - An allele is the specific genetic variation in a
gene - The sickle cell mutation is an allele of the beta
globin gene - We reserve the term mutation for alleles that
cause disease and are very rare
66Association and allele frequency in populations
Association with allele 1
Note the disease-associated allele is found in
the control population!
67Case Study
- A 53-year old African American male has an annual
check-up. He is 510 and 220 lbs. He reports
feeling well. Family history indicates a history
of diabetes in his mother that was diagnosed at
age 45. She died at age 58 from complications of
diabetes after 3 years on dialysis.
68An immediate practical consequence of the
discovery, said Decodes chief executive, Kari
Stefansson, would be to develop a diagnostic test
to identify people who carry the variant gene. If
people knew of their extra risk, they would
have an incentive to stay thin and exercise, he
said.
69TCF7L2 and Type 2 Diabetes
- 38 of people examined are heterozygous for the
TCF7L2 risk allele - Relative risk if you are heterozygous for the
TCF7L2 risk allele is 1.4. - 26 of people in the group without the risk
allele had T2D - 38 of people in the group heterozygous for the
risk allele had T2D - General population risk for T2D is 33
Grant et al. (2006) Nature Genetics 38 320-323
70Why is this study important?
- There was no prior evidence that TCF7L2 was
involved in diabetes. This gives us a new way to
look at the process by which diabetes develops. - Could ultimately lead to new treatments
- We may find other genes that, in combination with
TCF7L2, help us fully understand genetic
contributions to diabetes.
71Evaluating Association Studies
- Has the result been replicated in an independent
population? - How predictive is the genetic variation of
disease? - How do environmental risk factors interact with
this genetic risk factor? Does the environmental
risk have a much bigger role? - Would a genetic test for this variation give us
more accurate risk assessment than one based on
general family history and lifestyle factors?
72Unique Aspects of Genetic Medicine
- Youre really treating a family, not an
individual - Testing individuals can reveal information about
other family members - Testing can be predictive
- Especially as we move toward genomic tests, we
may find things were not looking for
73Genetic Resources
- National Society of Genetic Counselors
- http//www.nsgc.org/
- Genetics Home Reference
- http//ghr.nlm.nih.gov/
- NIH website with consumer-oriented information on
genetic variation and genetic disease - Gene Tests/Gene Reviews
- http//www.geneclinics.org/
- Current reviews of genetic disorders
- Labs that offer testing for each, if available
- Genetic clinics by geographic location
- Emory Genetics
- http//www.genetics.emory.edu/egl/index.php