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|MainCategory=Biochemistry, Genetics
|MainCategory=Biochemistry, Genetics
|SubCategory=Neurology
|SubCategory=Neurology
|Prompt=A 56-year old man presents to the physicians office with a history of difficulty with swallowing, involuntary jerky movements of the hands, progressive loss of speech and memory. His father died of similar symptoms and his symptoms is said to be worse than his father’s. This condition is an example of which of the following?
|Prompt=A 40-year old man presents to his primary care physician's office with a sixmonth history of difficulty with swallowing, involuntary jerky movements of the hands, and progressive memory loss. His father died of similar symptoms at the age of 55. This condition is an example of which of the following?
|Explanation=The patient in this vignette has [[Huntington’s disease]].  It is an example of anticipation where the severity of the disease worsens or age of onset of disease is earlier in succeeding generations. Symptoms manifest in affected individuals between the ages of 20 and 50. It is a trinucleotide repeat disorder (CAG)n with the gene located on chromosome 4. Findings include depression, progressive dementia, choreiform movements, caudate atrophy and decreased levels of GABA and Ach in the brain.
|Explanation=The patient in this vignette has [[Huntington’s disease]].  Symptoms manifest in affected individuals between the ages of 20 and 50. It is a trinucleotide repeat disorder caused by (CAG)n repeats in the Huntingtin gene located on chromosome 4. Findings include depression, progressive dementia, choreiform movements, caudate atrophy and decreased levels of GABA and Acetylcholine in the brain.
 
The fact that this patient is experiencing severe symptoms much earlier than his father is evidence of genetic anticipation.  Anticipation refers to the phenomenon in which an inherited disease strikes individuals earlier and with greater severity in succeeding generations.  
|AnswerA=Loss of heterozygosity
|AnswerA=Loss of heterozygosity
|AnswerAExp=[[Loss of heterozygosity]] refers to the loss of genetic material constituting a second, usually wild-type allele.  One classic example of loss of heterozygosity occurs in the development of retinoblastoma. For most tumor suppressor genes, the complementary allele must be deleted/mutated before cancer develops.
|AnswerAExp=[[Loss of heterozygosity]] refers to the loss of genetic material constituting a second, usually wild-type allele.  One classic example of loss of heterozygosity occurs in the development of retinoblastoma. For most tumor suppressor genes, the complementary allele must be deleted/mutated before cancer develops.
|AnswerB=Locus heterogeneity
|AnswerB=Locus heterogeneity
|AnswerBExp=Locus heterogeneity refers to the phenomenon in which mutations at different loci produce the same phenotype.  Locus heterogeneity is exhibited by [[Marfan’s syndrome]], MEN 2B and homocystinuria.  
|AnswerBExp=Locus heterogeneity refers to the phenomenon in which mutations at different loci produce the same phenotype.  Locus heterogeneity is exhibited by [[Marfan’s syndrome]], MEN 2B and homocystinuria.
|AnswerC=Genomic imprinting
|AnswerC=Genomic imprinting
|AnswerCExp=Genomic [[imprinting]] is an epigenetic phenomenon by which certain genes can be expressed in a parent-of-origin-specific manner. The expression of one parental allele is often silenced by DNA methylation.  Genomic imprinting is seen in Prader-Willi syndrome and Angelman syndrome where the differences in phenotype depend on whether the chromosome carrying a deletion is inherited from the mother or the father.
|AnswerCExp=Genomic [[imprinting]] is an epigenetic phenomenon by which certain genes can be expressed in a parent-of-origin-specific manner. The expression of one parental allele is often silenced by DNA methylation.  Genomic imprinting is seen in Prader-Willi syndrome and Angelman syndrome where the differences in phenotype depend on whether the chromosome carrying a deletion is inherited from the mother or the father.

Revision as of 22:48, 20 March 2014

 
Author [[PageAuthor::Ogheneochuko Ajari, MB.BS, MS [1]]]
Exam Type ExamType::USMLE Step 1
Main Category MainCategory::Biochemistry, MainCategory::Genetics
Sub Category SubCategory::Neurology
Prompt [[Prompt::A 40-year old man presents to his primary care physician's office with a sixmonth history of difficulty with swallowing, involuntary jerky movements of the hands, and progressive memory loss. His father died of similar symptoms at the age of 55. This condition is an example of which of the following?]]
Answer A AnswerA::Loss of heterozygosity
Answer A Explanation [[AnswerAExp::Loss of heterozygosity refers to the loss of genetic material constituting a second, usually wild-type allele. One classic example of loss of heterozygosity occurs in the development of retinoblastoma. For most tumor suppressor genes, the complementary allele must be deleted/mutated before cancer develops.]]
Answer B AnswerB::Locus heterogeneity
Answer B Explanation [[AnswerBExp::Locus heterogeneity refers to the phenomenon in which mutations at different loci produce the same phenotype. Locus heterogeneity is exhibited by Marfan’s syndrome, MEN 2B and homocystinuria.]]
Answer C AnswerC::Genomic imprinting
Answer C Explanation [[AnswerCExp::Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon by which certain genes can be expressed in a parent-of-origin-specific manner. The expression of one parental allele is often silenced by DNA methylation. Genomic imprinting is seen in Prader-Willi syndrome and Angelman syndrome where the differences in phenotype depend on whether the chromosome carrying a deletion is inherited from the mother or the father.]]
Answer D AnswerD::Anticipation
Answer D Explanation [[AnswerDExp::Anticipation refers to the phenomenon in which disease severity worsens or the age of onset of symptoms becomes earlier in succeeding generations. The patient in this vignette is exhibiting symptoms of Huntington's disease, a classic syndrome for genetic anticipation.]]
Answer E AnswerE::Pleitropy
Answer E Explanation [[AnswerEExp::Pleiotropy occurs when one gene influences multiple, seemingly unrelated phenotypic traits. Pleitropy is seen in phenylketonuria where a defect in a single gene causes severe cognitive abnormalities as well as separate dermatologic abnormalities.]]
Right Answer RightAnswer::D
Explanation [[Explanation::The patient in this vignette has Huntington’s disease. Symptoms manifest in affected individuals between the ages of 20 and 50. It is a trinucleotide repeat disorder caused by (CAG)n repeats in the Huntingtin gene located on chromosome 4. Findings include depression, progressive dementia, choreiform movements, caudate atrophy and decreased levels of GABA and Acetylcholine in the brain.

The fact that this patient is experiencing severe symptoms much earlier than his father is evidence of genetic anticipation. Anticipation refers to the phenomenon in which an inherited disease strikes individuals earlier and with greater severity in succeeding generations.
Educational Objective: Anticipation refers to the phenomenon in which the severity of an inherited disease worsens over succeeding generations.
References: First Aid 2014 page 84]]

Approved Approved::Yes
Keyword WBRKeyword::Huntington's disease, WBRKeyword::Huntington disease, WBRKeyword::Genetics, WBRKeyword::Inherited, WBRKeyword::Anticipation, WBRKeyword::Inheritance, WBRKeyword::Neurodegenerative
Linked Question Linked::
Order in Linked Questions LinkedOrder::