Genetic Testing and Single Base Variation
Definitions
- Mutation: any heritable change in the human genome which causes a genetic disorder
- Polymorphisms: any variation in human genome which has a population frequency >1%
- Does not cause disease in its own right, but may predispose to common disease
- Penetrance: the likelihood of having a disease if you have a gene mutation
- Classical genetic disease (Mendelian disorders): one mutation sufficient to cause disease
- High penetrance, small environmental contribution
- Multifactorial disease: multiple polymorphisms cause a risk of disease
- Penetrance for any one mutation is low
Gene analysis
aCGH
- Large scale - 3 million BPs
- Detects missing/duplicated pieces of chromosome
- Does not detect balanced rearrangements
FISH
- Uses fluorescent probes that bind only to parts of a nucleic acid sequence with a high degree of sequence complementarity
- Often used for finding specific features in DNA for use in genetic counselling
PCR
- Can select one small piece of human genome from a patient and amplify it
- Pieces can be selected to find mutations
Whole exome sequencing
- Sequences exome - all the exons (vs. whole genome sequencing – introns and exons)
Genetic filtering
- On average approx. 3 000 000 polymorphisms are detected when sequencing the entire genome in a person
- To identify the pathogenic variant, the list of variants is filtered to remove those that are unlikely to be disease causing
Types of mutation
Missense mutations
- Point mutations that cause a change to a single amino acid
- Usually caused by substitutions
- Most likely mutation to directly activate an oncogene
- Other mutations tend to inactivate the gene
Changes to amino acid sequence
- Mutation may change protein sequence which may alter protein function
- Mutation may result in a premature stop codon
Insertion/deletion
- Causes a complete change to the entire amino acid sequence after the mutation site
- In frame - insertion/deletion of a multiple of 3 bases
- Out of frame - results in a frame shift
Promotor and splice site sequence changes
- Stop transcription or cause abnormal splicing
Nomeclature
- g. (genomic build) – e.g. g.123[G>A];[=]
- c. (RNA as if DNA) – e.g. c.125[C>G];[=]
- p. (protein) – e.g. p.Pro172Arg
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