1 / 35

Genetics of Ataxia

Genetics of Ataxia. Lisa Castillo, MS Genetic Counselor The University of Chicago. A little about me…. Objectives. Case example General principles of genetics & inheritance patterns Genetic testing options Symptomatic Presymptomatic. What is Genetics?.

joben
Download Presentation

Genetics of Ataxia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genetics of Ataxia Lisa Castillo, MS Genetic Counselor The University of Chicago

  2. A little about me…..

  3. Objectives • Case example • General principles of genetics & inheritance patterns • Genetic testing options • Symptomatic • Presymptomatic

  4. What is Genetics? • Defined: The branch of science concerned with heredity • Focus will be on clinical genetics • The branch of genetics concerned with the diagnosis, prognosis, management, and prevention of genetic diseases

  5. Cells • All cells in our body contain structures that run the cell, called organelles • Examples of organelles are mitochondria, golgi bodies, endoplasmic reticulum, ribosomes • All cells contain a nucleus • The genetic material is in the nucleus

  6. Inside the nucleus

  7. Chromosomes • 23 pairs of chromosomes = 46 chromosomes • 22 autosomal pairs and 1 pair of sex chromosomes

  8. What does a chromosome do?

  9. Genes • 30,000 to 50,000 genes on the 23 chromosomes • Genes are made up of proteins, the 4 making up the genetic code are called: • Adenine (A) • Tyrosine (T) • Guanine (G) • Cytosine (C) • These 4 letters are repeated in a very specific order and are then translated into a protein based on the order.

  10. Gene mutation • Based on the order of the letters, if one or more letters are altered, missing, or repeated, this is called a gene mutation. • Since chromosomes come in pairs, each pair has the same genes, except that one pair comes from mom and the other pair comes from dad, so we each have 2 of each gene.

  11. Passing on chromosomes Egg or Sperm Egg or Sperm

  12. Inheritance and genetics • 3 main types of inheritance • Autosomal recessive • Autosomal dominant • X-linked

  13. Ataxia with Autosomal Recessive Inheritance

  14. Friedreich Ataxia • Expansion in intron 1 of both copies of FXN gene • 98% of FA individuals • Point mutation in FXN gene + FXN expansion • 2% of FA individuals

  15. Trinucleotide repeats • Repeated nucleotides are normal • Number determines disease GAAGAAGAAGAA GAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAA In Friedreich ataxia-both genes w/expansion: GAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAA GAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAAGAA

  16. Autosomal Recessive • A gene mutation must occur in both copies of the gene in order for symptoms to be present • 2 chromosomes Symptoms occur Gene is not working on either chromosome

  17. Autosomal Recessive • If a person has one of the two copies that does not work, they are carriers Carrier Parent Carrier Parent 25% 50% carrier 25% Unaffected Unaffected Affected

  18. Autosomal Recessive

  19. Genetic testing for FA • Useful for other family members to detect carrier status • Carrier frequency 1:60-1:100 • Pregnancy planning options if both parents are carriers • Amniocentesis, CVS, preimplantation genetic diagnosis • Participation in clinical trials

  20. Ataxias with Autosomal Dominant Inheritance

  21. Majority of the Spinocerebellar ataxias have autosomal dominant inheritance

  22. Autosomal Dominant • A gene mutation occurring in one of the two genes is enough to cause symptoms to occur. 2 chromosomes: Symptoms occur Gene is not working Gene is working

  23. Autosomal Dominant Affected Parent Unaffected Parent 50% 50% Unaffected Affected

  24. Autosomal Dominant

  25. Trinucleotide repeats • Genetics • CAG repeats (trinucleotide repeats) • Normal and expanded copies of SCA genes have trinucleotide repeats, number of CTG repeats determines affected status • Sometimes more severe in subsequent generations (anticipation)

  26. Genetic testing • Testing is to detect the number of trinucleotide repeats • If not previously done in the family, needs to be performed on someone with SCA diagnosis • ~2-4 weeks • Lab reports # of repeats

  27. Genes/loci known in SCA

  28. Symptomatic genetic testing • Genetic testing on someone who has symptoms of SCA. • To clarify the type of SCA • Will have genetic information for other family members

  29. Presymptomatic Genetic Testing • If genetic testing previously done in family, type of SCA and # of repeats is known: • Can do genetic testing in other family members who are at-risk but do not have ataxia symptoms • Personal decision

  30. Presymptomatic Genetic Testing • Points to consider • Timing of testing • Who to tell results to? • Effect on relationships: spouse, siblings, parents, children • Professional support to discuss decision • Insurance issues: have life insurance prior to testing; medical insurance now covered by GINA • Reasons people consider doing presx test • Family planning • Career decisions • Financial planning • Stress of not knowing • Enrollment into clinical trials

  31. Presymptomatic Genetic Testing Protocol • Adapted from Huntington Disease Presymptomatic Genetic Testing Protocol • Steps to genetic testing • Neurological examination • Meet with genetic counselor • Psychological examination • Draw blood • Get results in person from neurologist and genetic counselor

  32. www.ataxia.org

  33. Genetic Counseling • If a family member is affected with a condition, they can be seen by a genetic counselor. • Take family history, give risk assessments, coordinate genetic testing, explain genetic testing results, discuss pregnancy options

  34. Questions?Lisa Castillo, MSGenetic Counselor(773) 702-4310Ldellefa@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu

More Related