Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLoreen Gordon Modified over 9 years ago
1
Medical genetics Dr. Lina Basel Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel
2
1. What is the problem 2. Why did it happen 3. What will it mean for our baby 4. Will it happen again Benefits of genetic evaluation
3
Reproductive counseling: carrier testing, prenatal diagnosis Presymptomatic screening for associated complications Referral to support groups Benefits of genetic evaluation
4
How do you make a syndrome diagnosis? History Examination Investigations
5
Family history Any relative with mental retardation or known malformations Neonatal deaths, stillbirths or childhood deaths Familial disorders or physical features Consanguinity in parents Ethnic background Prior genetic testing or screening
6
History Family history – pedigree: what is the mode of inheritance? - AR, AD, XL, Y-linked, mitochondrial, trinucleotide repeat expansion
7
History Maternal health, vitamin supplements and drug use hydantoin
8
History Maternal health, vitamin supplements and drug use valproic acid
9
History Maternal health, vitamin supplements and drug use alcohol
10
History Pregnancy investigations: NT US Biochemical screening Amniocentesis Fetal MRI
11
Physical examination Height plot on appropriate growth chart
12
Physical examination Proportions U/L segment Arm span Hand length
13
Posture and tone: trisomy 18 PWS Physical examination
14
Facial expression: Angelman syndrome Physical examination
15
Movements and behavior: Rett syndrome Physical examination
16
Characteristic personality: Williams syndrome Physical examination
17
Karyotype, FISH, low- resolution CGH Molecular tests (sequencing, specific mutation testing) CHG arrays, SNP arrays, MLPA
18
Chromosomal tests
19
Subtelomeric regions Chromosomal structure
20
Cytogenetic tests - karyotype
21
Indications: Mental retardation Dysmorphic features Major anomaly Recurrent spontaneous abortions Family history of multiple affected individuals with MR/malformations 5-10 Mb resolution (300-600 cytogenetic bands)
22
ECARUCA
23
Cytogenetic tests – high resolution karyotype Indications: High suspicion of chromosomal anomaly
24
Microdeletions and microduplications Wolf-Hirshhorn Williams DiGeorge/VCFS Miller-Dieker lissencephaly Rubinstein-Taybi Smith-Magenis
25
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) Need to suspect a specific diagnosis! Cytogenetic tests – FISH (Fluorescent in situ hybridization)
26
Cytogenetic tests – FISH
27
Indications: Detects specific microdeletions/microduplications Quick test for detection of abnormal chromosome number (pregnancy)
28
Di George/VCFS Aortic arch abnormalities Hypocalcemia Cleft palate Immunodeficiency Developmental delay Psychiatric disorders
29
Williams syndrome Characteristic facies Supravalvular AS Hypercalcemia Microcephaly Kidney abnormalities Musculoskeletal problems Developmental delay
30
Prader Willi/Angelman syndrome
31
Cytogenetic tests – subtelomeric FISH
32
Indications: Mental retardation/dysmorphic features/congenital anomalies Familial cases (especially if variable clinical features Detects deletions/duplications of the subtelomeric regions
33
Cytogenetic tests – subtelomeric FISH
34
SKY – spectral karyotyping Indications: Unidentified chromosomal marker Multiple chromosomal translocations
35
Molecular cytogenetic techniques Array CGH SNP array
36
Array CGH Genomic rearrangements detectable by array CGH: 10- 15% in patients with syndromic MR Depends on the stringency of the clinical criteria Molecular cytogenetic techniques
37
Targeted array 1 Mb resolution (aCGH with 3,000-3,500 BAC clones) 10-100 kb resolution (aCGH with 32,447 BACs/oligos) Exon aCGH (all ~250,000 exons in human genome) Array CGH – resolution Various levels of resolution: the higher the resolution, the higher the detection rate
38
Indications: Mental retardation/dysmorphic features/congenital anomalies Detection of microdeletions, microduplications No need for specific diagnosis Array CGH
39
Copy number variants (CNVs) How much copy number variations (CNVs) exist? What is the contribution of copy number variation to genetic disease? What role has copy number variation played in recent human evolution?
40
SNP array CCCCAGCCTCCTTGCCAACGCCCCCTTTCCCTCTCCCCCTCCCGCTCGGCGCTGACCCCCCA TCCCCACCCCCGTGGGAACACTGGGAGCCTGCACTCCACAGACCCTCTCCTTGCCTCTTCC CTCACCTCAGCCTCCGCTCCCCGCCCTCTTCCCGGCCCAGGGCGCCGGCCCACCCTTCCCTC CGCCGCCCCCCGGCCGCGGGGAGGACATGGCCGCGCACAGGCCGGTGGAATGGGTCCAGG CCGTGGTCAGCCGCTTCGACGAGCAGCTTCCAATAAAAACAGGACAGCAGAACACACAT ACCAAAGTCAGTACTGAGCACAACAAGGAATGTCTAATCAATATTTCCAAATACAAGT TTTCTTTGGTTATAAGCGGCCTCACTACTATTTTAAAGAATGTTAACAATATGAGAAT ATTTGGAGAAGCTGCTGAAAAAAATTTATATCTCTCTCAGTTGATTATATTGGATAC ACTGGAAAAATGTCTTGCTGGGCAACCAAAGGACACAATGAGATTAGATGAAACGAT GCTGGTCAAACAGTTGCTGCCAGAAATCTGCCATTTTCTTCACACCTGTCGTGAAGGAA ACCAGCATGCAGCTGAACTTCGGAATTCTGCCTCTGGGGTTTTATTTTCTCTCAGCTGC AACAACTTCAATGCAGTCTTTAGTCGCATTTCTACCAGGTTACAGGAATTAACTGTTT GTTCAGAAGACAATGTTGATGTTCATGATATAGAATTGTTACAGTATATCAATGTGG ATTGTGCAAAATTAAAACGACTCCTGAAGGAAACAGCATTTAAATTTAAAGCCCTAA AGAAGGTTGCGCAGTTAGCAGTTATAAATAGCCTGGAAAAGGCATTTTGGAACTGGGT AGAAAATTATCCAGATGAATTTACAAAACTGTACCAGATCCCACAGACTGATATGGCT GAATGTGCAGAAAAGCTATTTGACTTGGTGGATGGTTTTGCTGAAAGCACCAAACGTA AAGCAGCAGTTTGGCCACTACAAATCATTCTCCTTATCTTGTGTCCAGAAATAATCCA GGATATATCCAAAGACGTGGTTGATGAAAACAACATGAATAAGAAGTTATTTCTGGA CAGTCTACGAAAAGCTCTTGCTGGCCATGGAGGAAGTAGGCAGCTGACAGAAAGTGCT GCAATTGCCTGTGTCAAACTGTGTAAAGCAAGTACTTACATCAATTGGGAAGATAACT CTGTCATTTTCCTACTTGTTCAGTCCATGGTGGTTGATCTTAAGAACCTGCTTTTTAAT CCAAGTAAGCCATTCTCAAGAGGCAGTCAGCCTGCAGATGTGGATCTAATGATTGACT GCCTTGTTTCTTGCTTTCGTATAAGCCCTCACAACAACCAACACTTTAAGATCTGCCTG GCTCAGAATTCACCTTCTACATTTCACTATGTGCTGGTAAATTCACTCCATCGAATCAT CACCAATTCCGCATTGGATTGGTGGCCTAAGATTGATGCTGTGTATTGTCACTCGGTTG AACTTCGAAATATGTTTGGTGAAACACTTCATAAAGCAGTGCAAGGTTGTGGAGCACA CCCAGCAATACGAATGGCACCGAGTCTTACATTTAAAGAAAAAGTAACAAGCCTTAAA TTTAAAGAAAAACCTACAGACCTGGAGACAAGAAGCTATAAGTATCTTCTCTTGTCCA TGGTGAAACTAATTCATGCAGATCCAAAGCTCTTGCTTTGTAATCCAAGAAAACAGGG GCCCGAAACCCAAGGCAGTACAGCAGAATTAATTACAGGGCTCGTCCAACTGGTCCCTC AGTCACACATGCCAGAGATTGCTCAGGAAGCAATGGAGGCTCTGCTGGTTCTTCATCAG TTAGATAGCATTGATTTGTGGAATCCTGATGCTCCTGTAGAAACATTTTGGGAGATTA GCTCACAAATGCTTTTTTACATCTGCAAGAAATTAACTAGTCATCAAATGCTTAGTAG CACAGAAATTCTCAAGTGGTTGCGGGAAATATTGATCTGCAGGAATAAATTTCTTCTT AAAAATAAGCAGGCAGATAGAAGTTCCTGTCACTTTC CCCCAGCCTCCTTGCCAACGCCCCCTTTCCCTCTCCCCCTCCCGCTCGGCGCTGACCCCCCA TCCCCACCCCCGTGGGAACACTGGGAGCCTGCACTCCACAGACCCTCTCCTTGCCTCTTCC CTCACCTCAGCCTCCGCTCCCCGCCCTCTTCCCGGCCCAGGGCGCCGGCCCACCCTTCCCTC CGCCGCCCCCCGGCCGCGGGGAGGACATGGCCGCGCACAGGCCGGTGGAATGGGTCCAGG CCGTGGTCAGCCGCTTCGACGAGCAGCTTCCAATAAAAACAGGACAGCAGAACACACAT ACCAAAGTCAGTACTGAGCACAACAAGGAATGTCTAATCAATATTTCCAAATACAAGT TTTCTTTGGTTATAAGCGGCCTCACTACTATTTTAAAGAATGTTAACTATATGAGAAT ATTTGGAGAAGCTGCTGAAAAAAATTTATATCTCTCTCAGTTGATTATATTGGATAC ACTGGAAAAATGTCTTGCTGGGCAACCAAAGGACACAATGAGATTAGATGAAACGAT GCTGGTCAAACAGTTGCTGCCAGAAATCTGCCATTTTCTTCACACCTGTCGTGAAGGAA ACCAGCATGCAGCTGAACTTCGGAATTCTGCCTCTGGGGTTTTATTTTCTCTCAGCTGC AACAACTTCAATGCAGTCTTTAGTCGCATTTCTACCAGGTTACAGGAATTAACTGTTT GTTCAGAAGACAATGTTGATGTTCATGATATAGAATTGTTACAGTATATCAATGTGG ATTGTGCAAAATTAAAACGACTCCTGAAGGAAACAGCATTTAAATTTAAAGCCCTAA AGAAGGTTGCGCAGTTAGCAGTTATAAATAGCCTGGAAAAGGCATTTTGGAACTGGGT AGAAAATTATCCAGATGAATTTACAAAACTGTACCAGATCCCACAGACTGATATGGCT GAATGTGCAGAAAAGCTATTTGACTTGGTGGATGGTTTTGCTGAAAGCACCAAACGTA AAGCAGCAGTTTGGCCACTACAAATCATTCTCCTTATCTTGTGTCCAGAAATAATCCA GGATATATCCAAAGACGTGGTTGATGAAAACAACATGAATAAGAAGTTATTTCTGGA CAGTCTACGAAAAGCTCTTGCTGGCCATGGAGGAAGTAGGCAGCTGACAGAAAGTGCT GCAATTGCCTGTGTCAAACTGTGTAAAGCAAGTACTTACATCAATTGGGAAGATAACT CTGTCATTTTCCTACTTGTTCAGTCCATGGTGGTTGATCTTAAGAACCTGCTTTTTAAT CCAAGTAAGCCATTCTCAAGAGGCAGTCAGCCTGCAGATGTGGATCTAATGATTGACT GCCTTGTTTCTTGCTTTCGTATAAGCCCTCACAACAACCAACACTTTAAGATCTGCCTG GCTCAGAATTCACCTTCTACATTTCACTATGTGCTGGTAAATTCACTCCATCGAATCAT CACCAATTCCGCATTGGATTGGTGGCCTAAGATTGATGCTGTGTATTGTCACTCGGTTG AACTTCGAAATATGTTTGGTGAAACACTTCATAAAGCAGTGCAAGGTTGTGGAGCACA CCCAGCAATACGAATGGCACCGAGTCTTACATTTAAAGAAAAAGTAACAAGCCTTAAA TTTAAAGAAAAACCTACAGACCTGGAGACAAGAAGCTATAAGTATCTTCTCTTGTCCA TGGTGAAACTAATTCATGCAGCTCCAAAGCTCTTGCTTTGTAATCCAAGAAAACAGGG GCCCGAAACCCAAGGCAGTACAGCAGAATTAATTACAGGGCTCGTCCAACTGGTCCCTC AGTCACACATGCCAGAGATTGCTCAGGAAGCAATGGAGGCTCTGCTGGTTCTTCATCAG TTAGATAGCATTGATTTGTGGAATCCTGATGCTCCTGTAGAAACATTTTGGGAGATTA GCTCACAAATGCTTTTTTACATCTGCAAGAAATTAACTAGTCATCAAATGCTTAGTAG CACAGAAATTCTCAAGTGGTTGCGGGAAATATTGATCTGCAGGAATAAATTTCTTCTT AAAAATAAGCAGGCAGATAGAAGTTCCTGTCACTTTC
41
SNP array Density – 10K, 50/100K, 500K
43
DNA tests
44
Direct mutation analysis –DNA sequencing –Specific mutation analysis –Deletion analysis Linkage analysis – utilization of traceable gene markers next to the gene of interest
45
Testing for the specific mutation
46
Sequencing
47
Deletion testing – MLPA (Multiplex Ligation- dependent Probe Amplification )
48
Southern blotting
49
Linkage analysis Looks for pattern of DNA markers near gene of interest that segregate with disease Requires DNA analysis of multiple family members 1, 2 3, 4 1, 3 1, 4 2, 3 2, 4 1234
50
0/100 %50/50 % X inactivation
51
Genetic testing in the fetus Non-disclosing prenatal testing The parent is at 50% risk and is not showing symptoms. In this case, to find that the fetus carries the gene for Huntington's disease automatically reveals that the parent is a gene-carrier as well
52
Ill grandparent parent fetus Non-disclosing prenatal testing
53
Sequencing of all the genes– laborious… How do we diagnose children with heterogeneic conditions? hearing loss HMSN mental retardation hereditary ataxia spastic paraplegia
54
MR: etiology
55
Resequencing microarray Recently, a resequencing microarray has been developed for XLMR genes On this chip 17 XLMR genes are represented, including frequently mutated genes such as ARX, JARID1C and PQBP1 Together they account for approximately 40% of all mutations in MR genes on the X chromosome
56
Genetic testing Identification of molecular defect in the affected individual Research lab - no costs - might take a long time - need to confirm the test in the clinical lab Clinical lab - usually quick/reliable - expensive
58
Attitude of different populations towards prenatal testing Non religious Jews : prenatal testing by CVS or amniocentesis (pregnancy interruption possible up to birth, even at 40 weeks of pregnancy); preimplantation genetic diagnosis Orthodox Jews : preimplantation genetic diagnosis (pregnancy interruption possible up to 40 days only – no prenatal testing possible) Muslim Arabs : prenatal testing by CVS or amniocentesis; (pregnancy interruption possible up to 120 days of pregnancy); preimplantation genetic diagnosis
59
If mutation in the affected individual found – molecular testing of the fetus by CVS or amniocenthesis Or: Preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) If gene unknown for X- linked diseases – fetal sexing Prenatal testing
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.