X chromosomal dominant inheritance - inheritance pattern
mother affected -> 50 % sons, 50 % daughters affected
father affected -> 100 % daughter = affected; son = 100 % unaffeceted (no male to male inheritance)
gender imbalance
Incontinentuia Pigmenti (Bloch-Sulzberger-Syndrome)
genodermatosis with skin alterations (age-dependent)
teeth- & nail-anomalies
mental retardation (~ 10 % of patients)
X-chromosomal dominant inheritance - Incontinentuia Pigmenti
mutations in the IKBKG gene (Xq28)
IKBKG involved in inflammation, immunity, cell survival
only affected women // miscarriage of sons
daughters survive, bc random inactivation of maternal or paternal X-chr. in early embryogenesis (lyonization) -> can also be transferred to children
males = hemizygous (bc. only one X chr.)
X chromosomal dominant inheritance - prevalence
= very rare
hemizygous = lethal diseases:
incontinentia pigmenti (IP)
Rett-Syndrome
Vitamin-D-resistant rickets with hypophosatemia
Alport-Syndrome
men with mild or no symptoms
Epileptic encephalopathy type 9
Craniofrontonasal syndrome (mutation in EFNB1 gene)
X-chromosomal recessive inheritance - characteristics
no male to male transmission
all daughters of affected male = affected
men w/o symptoms = never carrier
sons of female carriers have 50 % probability to be affected
half of the daugthers of carriers are carriers themselves
lyonization // functional hemizygosity can cause exceptions from rule according to females
X-chromosomal recessive - example: Hemophilia A & B
type A: deficiency in coagulation factor VIII
type B: deficiency in coagulation factor IX
BUT: identical clinical phenotype (= bleeding into joint/muscles)
parent specific mutations in hemophilia A:
F8 gene Xq28 (PAR = pseudo-autososmal regioins)
inversion within chromosome, point mutation (paternal)
maternal deletion (cross-over, meiosis)
risk = old parents
disease of English Monarchie (Queen Victoria)
Fragile X syndrome
optical appearance = rather normal
after puberty = large testes
intellectual disability
speech delay
autistic features
hyperactivity
hand biting
arm flapping
Fragile X syndrome - cause
expansion of CGG triplet in FMR1 gene
= related to the brain
different repeat numbers (intermediate will grow in size); full mutation: + methylation
Garber et al, Eur J Hum Genet 2008
Fragile X syndrome - phenotype correlation
distinct in male and females
Y-chromosomal inheritance
only males affected
very rare, bc. Y chr. mostly involved in sexual differentiation, development of phenotypic sex AND SPERMATOGENESIS
mutation -> infertility => no transmission, unless artificial reproductive techniques
example: AZF-deletion (AZFa,b,c) = Azospermia
a, b = not fertile
c = sometimes fertile, but son will inherit condition 100 %
Last changed2 years ago