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Summary Screening tratement and therapies

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  • February 21, 2022
  • 6
  • 2018/2019
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BLGY1232 Screening, treatment and therapies for inherited disease

Can they be cured?
 We can’t change our genes but can monitor what we pass on to the next generation
 Genetic counselling provides information and options for carriers of alleles causing
disorders
 Diagnosis by genetic testing is available for newborns for some conditions
 Pre-natal diagnosis of embryos is also possible
 Screening enables us to identify at-risk individuals

Screening of newborns
 Condition screened for should be relatively common
 Condition should be treatable with early intervention producing positive outcomes
 Test should be accurate
 Phenylketonuria; autosomal recessive, 1 in 15,000 (but 1 in 4500 in Ireland and 1 in
2500 in Turkey), mutation in Phenylalanine hydroxylase  if untreated can lead to
progressive mental retardation and early diagnosis and implementation of low-
phenylalanine diet prevents this
 In the UK the NHS universal screening of all infants at 5 days of age is offered for;
 Phenylketonuria (PKU) - an inability to convert phenylalanine to tyrosine
results in a buildup of Phe in the blood. This is converted to phenylketons. If
undetected, there is a progressive mental deterioration. Diagnosis soon after
childbirth allows the condition to be managed by a low phenylalanine diet
 Congenital hypothyroidism (CHT) - low levels of thyroid hormone result in
stunted growth & mental retardation. Affects about 1 in 4000. Easily treated
by daily thyroxine tablet.
 Sickle cell disease (SCD)
 Cystic fibrosis (CF)
 Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD) - Defect in lipid
metabolism, a possible cause of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. May not be
too harmful except under food deprivation (>10-12 hr) in which case sudden
collapse is possible.
 Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (boys in Wales)
 Homocystinuria (N. Ire) - Defect in methionine metabolism causes buildup of
homocystine in blood, leading to cardiovascular conditions. Treated by
Vitamin B6 supplementation and low methionine diet.
 Tyrosinaemia (N. Ire) - Inability to break down tyrosine leading to liver
failure. Treated with low-protein diet and drug Nitisinone

Prenatal genetic screening
 Amniocentesis samples amniotic fluid to collect foetal cells for analysis at 14-20
weeks
 Chorionic villus sampling collects placental cells at 10-15 weeks
 Commonly used for screening for chromosomal abnormalities like Down syndrome
(chromosome 21 trisomy), but other conditions also detectable
 Invasive: some risk to foetus
 Enables intervention at or before birth

,  Provides parents with information so they can choose to terminate pregnancy or
make appropriate preparations

Preimplantation genetic diagnosis
 Associated with IVF - Typically multiple egg cells are fertilised, and the resultant
embryos can be screened by collecting a single cell from the blastocyst for genetic
analysis
 A single cell can be removed from an early embryo and DNA genotyped by PCR assay
 Used to screen for alleles of single-gene disorders
 Also used to check embryos generated by IVF to ensure no chromosomal
abnormalities
 Ethical issues; IVF generates multiple embryos so what happens to unwanted ones?
What traits should one be allowed to choose?
 Therapies for many disorders could be developed if we knew more about their
progression in affected individuals. For many conditions, the first inkling the medical
profession has is when a patient turns up in the doctor’s surgery. By this time, it may
be too late.


Saviour sibling
 Charlie Whitaker was born with Diamond Blackfan Anaemia (DBA), which prevents
his body making red blood cells  In the short term, this can be managed by
repeated blood transfusion  It can be permanently cured by a bone marrow
transplant, but this requires a tissue-matched donor  Charlie’s parents and sister
did not carry the compatible antigens  In 2003, the UK HFEA refused permission
for a “designer baby” – an embryo produced by IVF and selected for it’s
transplantation antigen genotype  The Whitakers flew to the US to have IVF and
select an embryo with a compatible genotype: Jamie Whitaker from whose umbilical
cord stem cells were collected for the transplant.
 Megan Matthews was born with Fanconi Anaemia – a DNA repair defect causing
bone marrow failure  Megan was the first child to be cured by a “saviour Sibling”
in the UK  Following IVF, 3-day-old embryos were tested for a genetic match 
Megan’s mother had 2 embryos implanted. One – Megan’s brother Max – was born
in 2009, and provided umbilical cord blood and bone marrow for a successful
transplant  Note: Fanconi Anaemia is a general DNA repair disorder: Megan may
suffer from other consequences of the disorder, in other tissues that are not
replaced by bone-marrow transplant

Developing effective treatments for human disorders
 We have to know how a condition develops thought the life of the affected
individual
 In many cases we lack knowledge of the early stages, since these may be
asymptomatic, and the affected person is not medically assessed until symptoms
appear
 Now we can make transgenic mice that have been genetically engineered to contain
defective genes and monitor progress throughout development – although mice and

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