Genetics and Genomics in Medicine

Höfundur Tom Strachan; Anneke Lucassen

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780367490829

Útgáfa 2

Útgáfuár 2022

8.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • 1 Fundamentals of DNA, Chromosomes, and Cells
  • 1.1 The Structure and Function of Nucleic Acids
  • General concepts: the genetic material, genomes, and genes
  • The underlying chemistry of nucleic acids
  • Base pairing and the double helix
  • DNA replication and DNA polymerases
  • Genes, transcription, and the central dogma of molecular biology
  • 1.2 The Structure and Function of Chromosomes
  • Why we need highly structured chromosomes, and how they are organized
  • Chromosome function: replication origins, centromeres, and telomeres
  • 1.3 DNA and Chromosomes in Cell Division and the Cell Cycle
  • Differences in DNA copy number between cells
  • The cell cycle and segregation of replicated chromosomes and DNA molecules
  • Mitosis: the usual form of cell division
  • Meiosis: a specialized reductive cell division giving rise to sperm and egg cells
  • Why each of our gametes is unique
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 2 Fundamentals of Gene Structure, Gene Expression, and Human Genome Organization
  • 2.1 Protein-Coding Genes: Structure and Expression
  • Gene organization: exons and introns
  • RNA splicing: stitching together the genetic information in exons
  • Translation: decoding messenger RNA to make a polypeptide
  • From newly synthesized polypeptide to mature protein
  • 2.2 RNA Genes and Noncoding RNA
  • The extraordinary secondary structure and versatility of RNA
  • RNAs that act as specific regulators: from quirky exceptions to the mainstream
  • 2.3 Working Out the Details of Our Genome and What They Mean
  • The Human Genome Project: working out the details of the nuclear genome
  • What the sequence didn’t tell us and the goal of identifying all functional human DNA sequences
  • 2.4 A Quick Tour of Some Electronic Resources Used to Interrogate the Human Genome Sequence and Gene Products
  • Gene nomenclature and the HGNC gateway
  • Databases storing nucleotide and protein sequences
  • Finding related nucleotide and protein sequences
  • Links to clinical databases
  • 2.5 The Organization and Evolution of the Human Genome
  • A brief overview of the evolutionary mechanisms that shaped our genome
  • How much of our genome is functionally significant?
  • The mitochondrial genome: economical usage but limited autonomy
  • Gene distribution in the human genome
  • The extent of repetitive DNA in the human genome
  • The organization of gene families
  • The significance of gene duplication and repetitive coding DNA
  • Highly repetitive noncoding DNA in the human genome
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 3 Principles Underlying Core DNA Technologies
  • 3.1 Amplifying DNA by DNA Cloning
  • Amplifying desired DNA within bacterial cells
  • The need for vector DNA molecules
  • Physical clone separation
  • The need for restriction nucleases
  • DNA libraries and the uses and limitations of DNA cloning
  • 3.2 Amplifying DNA Using the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
  • Basics of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
  • Quantitative PCR and real-time PCR
  • 3.3 Principles of Nucleic Acid Hybridization
  • Formation of artificial heteroduplexes
  • Hybridization assays: using known nucleic acids to find related sequences in a test nucleic acid population
  • Microarray hybridization: large-scale parallel hybridization to immobilized probes
  • 3.4 Principles of DNA Sequencing
  • Dideoxy DNA sequencing
  • Massively parallel DNA sequencing (next-generation sequencing)
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 4 Principles of Genetic Variation
  • 4.1 DNA Sequence Variation Origins and DNA Repair
  • Genetic variation arising from errors in chromosome and DNA function
  • Various endogenous and exogenous sources can cause damage to DNA by altering its chemical structure
  • The wide range of DNA repair mechanisms
  • Repair of DNA damage or altered sequence on a single DNA strand
  • Repair of DNA lesions that affect both DNA strands
  • Undetected DNA damage, DNA damage tolerance, and translesion synthesis
  • 4.2 Population Genomics and the Scale of Human Genetic Variation
  • DNA variants, polymorphisms, and human population genomics
  • Small-scale variation: single nucleotide variants and small insertions and deletions
  • Microsatellites and other variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) polymorphisms
  • Structural variation and low copy number variation
  • Taking stock of human genetic variation
  • 4.3 Functional Genetic Variation and Protein Polymorphism
  • The vast majority of genetic variation has a neutral effect on the phenotype, but a small fraction is harmful
  • Different types of Darwinian natural selection operate in human lineages
  • Generating protein diversity by gene duplication: the example of olfactory receptor genes
  • 4.4 Extraordinary Genetic Variation in the Immune System
  • Pronounced genetic variation in four classes of immune system proteins
  • Programmed and random post-zygotic genetic variation
  • Somatic mechanisms allow cell-specific production of immunoglobulins and T-cell receptors
  • MHC (HLA) proteins: functions and polymorphism
  • The medical importance of the HLA system
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 5 Single-Gene Disorders: Inheritance Patterns, Phenotype Variability, and Allele Frequencies
  • 5.1 Introduction: Terminology, Electronic Resources, and Pedigrees
  • Background terminology and electronic resources with information on single-gene disorders
  • Investigating family history of disease and recording pedigrees
  • 5.2 The Basics of Mendelian and Mitochondrial DNA Inheritance Patterns
  • Autosomal dominant inheritance
  • Autosomal recessive inheritance
  • Sex-linked inheritance
  • Matrilineal inheritance for mitochondrial DNA disorders
  • 5.3 Uncertainty, Heterogeneity, and Variable Expression of Mendelian Phenotypes
  • Difficulties in defining the mode of inheritance in small pedigrees
  • Heterogeneity in the correspondence between phenotypes and the underlying genes and mutations
  • Nonpenetrance and age-related penetrance
  • 5.4 Allele Frequencies in Populations
  • Allele frequencies and the Hardy-Weinberg law
  • Applications and limitations of the Hardy-Weinberg law
  • Ways in which allele frequencies change in populations
  • Population bottlenecks and founder effects
  • Mutation versus selection in determining allele frequencies
  • Heterozygote advantage: when natural selection favors carriers of recessive disease
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 6 Principles of Gene Regulation and Epigenetics
  • The two fundamental types of gene regulation
  • Cis-acting and trans-acting effects in gene regulation
  • 6.1 Genetic Regulation of Gene Expression
  • Promoters: the major on–off switches in genes
  • Modulating transcription and tissue-specific regulation
  • Transcription factor binding and specificity
  • Genetic regulation during RNA processing: RNA splicing and RNA editing
  • Translational regulation by trans-acting regulatory proteins
  • Post-transcriptional gene silencing by microRNAs
  • Repressing the repressors: competing endogenous RNAs sequester miRNA
  • 6.2 Chromatin Modification and Epigenetic Factors in Gene Regulation
  • An overview of the molecular basis of epigenetic mechanisms
  • How changes in chromatin structure produce altered gene expression
  • Histone modification and histone substitution in nucleosomes
  • Modified histones and histone variants affect chromatin structure
  • The function of DNA methylation in mammalian cells
  • DNA methylation: mechanisms, heritability, and global roles during early development and gametogenesis
  • Long noncoding RNAs in mammalian epigenetic regulation
  • Genomic imprinting: differential expression of maternally and paternally inherited alleles
  • X-chromosome inactivation: compensating for sex differences in gene dosage
  • 6.3 Abnormal Epigenetic Regulation in Mendelian Disorders and Uniparental Disomy
  • Principles of epigenetic dysregulation
  • “Chromatin diseases” due to mutations in genes specifying chromatin modifiers
  • Disease resulting from dysregulation of heterochromatin
  • Uniparental disomy and disorders of imprinting
  • Abnormal gene regulation at imprinted loci
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 7 How Genetic Variation in DNA and Chromosomes Causes Disease
  • 7.1 An Overview of How Genetic Variation Results in Disease
  • The importance of repeat sequences in triggering pathogenesis
  • 7.2 Pathogenic Nucleotide Substitutions and Tiny Insertions and Deletions
  • Pathogenic single nucleotide substitutions within coding sequences
  • Mutations that result in premature termination codons
  • Genesis and frequency of pathogenic point mutations
  • Surveying and curating point mutations that cause disease
  • 7.3 Pathogenesis Due to Variation in Short Tandem Repeat Copy Number
  • The two main classes of pathogenic variation in short tandem repeat copy-number
  • Dynamic disease-causing mutations due to unstable expansion of short tandem repeats
  • Unstable expansion of short tandem repeats can cause disease in different ways
  • 7.4 Pathogenesis Triggered by Long Tandem Repeats and Interspersed Repeats
  • Pathogenic exchanges between repeats occurs in both nuclear DNA and mtDNA
  • Nonallelic homologous recombination and transposition
  • Pathogenic sequence exchanges between chromatids at mispaired tandem repeats
  • Disease arising from sequence exchanges between distantly located repeats in nuclear DNA
  • 7.5 Chromosome Abnormalities
  • Structural chromosomal abnormalities
  • Chromosomal abnormalities involving gain or loss of complete chromosomes
  • 7.6 Molecular Pathology of Mitochondrial Disorders
  • Mitochondrial disorders due to mtDNA mutation show maternal inheritance and variable proportions of mutant genotypes
  • The two major classes of pathogenic DNA variant in mtDNA: large deletions and point mutations
  • 7.7 Effects on the Phenotype of Pathogenic Variants in Nuclear DNA
  • Mutations affecting how a single gene works: an overview of loss of function and gain of function
  • The effect of pathogenic variants depends on how the products of alleles interact: dominance and recessiveness revisited
  • Gain-of-function and loss-of-function mutations in the same gene can produce different phenotypes
  • Multiple gene dysregulation resulting from aneuploidies and mutations in regulatory genes
  • 7.8 A Protein Structure Perspective of Molecular Pathology
  • Pathogenesis arising from protein misfolding
  • The many different ways in which protein aggregation can result in disease
  • 7.9 Genotype–Phenotype Correlations and Why Monogenic Disorders are Often Not Simple
  • The difficulty in getting reliable genotype–phenotype correlations
  • Modifier genes and environmental factors: common explanations for poor genotype–phenotype correlations
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 8 Identifying Disease Genes and Genetic Susceptibility to Complex Disease
  • 8.1 Identifying Genes in Monogenic Disorders
  • A historical overview of identifying genes in monogenic disorders
  • Linkage analysis to map genes for monogenic disorders to defined subchromosomal regions
  • Chromosome abnormalities and other large-scale mutations as routes to identifying disease genes
  • Exome sequencing: let’s not bother getting a position for disease genes!
  • 8.2 Approaches to Mapping and Identifying Genetic Susceptibility to Complex Disease
  • The polygenic and multifactorial nature of common genetic disorders
  • Difficulties with lack of penetrance and phenotype classification in complex disease
  • Estimating heritability: the contribution made by genetic factors to the variance of complex diseases
  • The very limited success of linkage analyses in identifying genes underlying complex genetic diseases
  • The fundamentals of allelic association and the importance of HLA-disease associations
  • Linkage disequilibrium as the basis of allelic associations
  • How genomewide association studies are carried out
  • Moving from candidate subchromosomal region to identify causal genetic variants in complex disease can be challenging
  • The limitations of GWA studies and the issue of missing heritability
  • Alternative genome-wide studies and the role of rare variants and copy number variants in complex disease
  • The assessment and prediction of risk for common genetic diseases and the development of polygenic risk scores
  • 8.3 Aspects of the Genetic Architecture of Complex Disease and the Contributions of Environmental and Epigenetic Factors
  • Common neurodegenerative disease: from monogenic to polygenic disease
  • The importance of immune system pathways in common genetic disease
  • The importance of protective factors and how a susceptibility factor for one complex disease may be a protective factor for another disease
  • Gene–environment interactions in complex disease
  • Epigenetics in complex disease and aging: significance and experimental approaches
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 9 Genetic Approaches to Treating Disease
  • 9.1 An Overview of Treating Genetic Disease and of Genetic Treatment of Disease
  • Three different broad approaches to treating genetic disorders
  • Very different treatment options for different inborn errors of metabolism
  • Genetic treatment of disease may be conducted at many different levels
  • 9.2 Genetic Inputs into Treating Disease with Small Molecule Drugs and Therapeutic Proteins
  • An overview of how genetic differences affect the metabolism and performance of small molecule drugs
  • Phenotype differences arising from genetic variation in drug metabolism
  • Genetic variation in enzymes that work in phase II drug metabolism
  • Altered drug responses resulting from genetic variation in drug targets
  • When genotypes at multiple loci in patients are important in drug treatment: the example of warfarin
  • Translating genetic advances: from identifying novel disease genes to therapeutic small molecule drugs
  • Translating genomic advances and developing generic drugs as a way of overcoming the problem of too few drug targets
  • Developing biological drugs: therapeutic proteins produced by genetic engineering
  • Genetically engineered therapeutic antibodies with improved therapeutic potential
  • 9.3 Principles of Gene and Cell Therapy
  • Two broad strategies in somatic gene therapy
  • The delivery problem: designing optimal and safe strategies for getting genetic constructs into the cells of patients
  • Different ways of delivering therapeutic genetic constructs, and the advantages of ex vivo gene therapy
  • Viral delivery of therapeutic gene constructs: relatively high efficiency but safety concerns
  • Virus vectors used in gene therapy
  • The importance of disease models for testing potential therapies in humans
  • 9.4 Gene Therapy for Inherited Disorders: Practice and Future Directions
  • Multiple successes for ex vivo gene supplementation therapy targeted at hematopoietic stem cells
  • In vivo gene therapy: approaches, barriers, and recent successes
  • An overview of RNA and oligonucleotide therapeutics
  • RNA interference therapy
  • Future therapeutic prospects using CRISPR-Cas gene editing
  • Therapeutic applications of stem cells and cell reprogramming
  • Obstacles to overcome in cell therapy
  • A special case: preventing transmission of severe mitochondrial DNA disorders by mitochondrial replacement
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 10 Cancer Genetics and Genomics
  • 10.1 Fundamental Characteristics and Evolution of Cancer
  • The defining features of unregulated cell growth and cancer
  • Why cancers are different from other diseases: the contest between natural selection operating at the level of the cell and the level of the organism
  • Cancer cells acquire several distinguishing biological characteristics during their evolution
  • The initiation and multistage nature of cancer evolution and why most human cancers develop over many decades
  • Intratumor heterogeneity arises through cell infiltration, clonal evolution, and differentiation of cancer stem cells
  • 10.2 Oncogenes and Tumor Suppressor Genes
  • Two fundamental classes of cancer gene
  • Viral oncogenes and the natural roles of cellular oncogenes
  • How normal cellular proto-oncogenes are activated to become cancer genes
  • Tumor suppressor genes: normal functions, the two-hit paradigm, and loss of heterozygosity in linked markers
  • The key roles of gatekeeper tumor suppressor genes in suppressing G1-S transition in the cell cycle
  • The additional role of p53 in activating different apoptosis pathways to ensure that rogue cells are destroyed
  • Tumor suppressor involvement in rare familial cancers and non-classical tumor suppressors
  • The significance of miRNAs and long noncoding RNAs in cancer
  • 10.3 Genomic Instability and Epigenetic Dysregulation in Cancer
  • Different types of chromosomal instability in cancer
  • Deficiency in mismatch repair results in unrepaired replication errors and global DNA instability
  • Different classes of cancer susceptibility gene according to epigenetic function, epigenetic dysregulation, and epigenome–genome interaction
  • 10.4 New Insights from Genome-Wide Studies of Cancers
  • Genome sequencing has revealed extraordinary mutational diversity in tumors and insights into cancer evolution
  • Defining the landscape of driver mutations in cancer and establishing a complete inventory of cancer-susceptibility genes
  • Tracing the mutational history of cancers: just one of the diverse applications of single-cell genomics and transcriptomics in cancer
  • Genome-wide RNA sequencing enables insights into the link between cancer genomes and cancer biology and aids tumor classification
  • 10.5 Genetic Inroads into Cancer Therapy
  • Targeted anticancer therapies are directed against key cancer cell proteins involved in oncogenesis or in escaping immunosurveillance
  • CAR-T Cell therapy and the use of genetically engineered T cells to treat cancer
  • The molecular basis of tumor recurrence and the evolution of drug resistance in cancers
  • The promise of combinatorial drug therapies
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • 11 Genetic and Genomic Testing in Healthcare: Practical and Ethical Aspects
  • 11.1 An Overview of Genetic Testing
  • The different source materials and different levels of genetic testing
  • 11.2 Genetic Testing for Chromosome Abnormalities and Pathogenic Structural Variation
  • Screening for aneuploidies using quantitative fluorescence PCR
  • Detecting large-scale copy number variants using chromosome SNP microarray analysis
  • Detecting and scanning for oncogenic fusion genes using, respectively, chromosome FISH and targeted RNA sequencing
  • Detecting pathogenic moderate- to small-scale deletions and duplications at defined loci is often achieved using the MLPA or ddPCR methods
  • Two very different routes towards universal genome-wide screens for structural variation: genome-wide sequencing and optical genome mapping
  • 11.3 Genetic and Genomic Testing for Pathogenic Point Mutations and DNA Methylation Testing
  • Diverse methods permit rapid genotyping of specific point mutations
  • The advantages of multiplex genotyping
  • Mutation scanning: from genes and gene panels to whole exome and whole genome sequencing
  • Interpreting and validating sequence variants can be aided by extensive online resources
  • Detecting aberrant DNA methylation profiles associated with disease
  • 11.4 Genetic and Genomic Testing: Organization of Services and Practical Applications
  • The developing transformation of genetic services into mainstream genomic medicine
  • An overview of diagnostic and pre-symptomatic or predictive genetic testing
  • The different ways in which diagnosis of genetic conditions is carried out in the prenatal period
  • Preimplantation genetic testing is carried out to prevent the transmission of a harmful genetic defect using in vitro fertilization
  • Noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT) and whole genome testing of the fetus
  • An overview of the different types of genetic screening
  • Pregnancy screening for fetal abnormalities
  • Newborn screening allows the possibility of early medical intervention
  • Different types of carrier screening can be carried out for autosomal recessive conditions
  • New genomic technologies are being exploited in cancer diagnostics
  • Bypassing healthcare services: the rise of direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic testing
  • The downsides of improved sensitivity through whole genome sequencing: increased uncertainty about what variants mean
  • 11.5 Ethical, Legal, and Societal Issues (ELSI) in Genetic Testing
  • Genetic information as family information
  • Consent issues in genetic testing
  • The generation of genetic data is outstripping the ability to provide clinical interpretation
  • New disease gene discovery and changing concepts of diagnosis
  • Complications in diagnosing mitochondrial disease
  • Complications arising from incidental, additional, secondary, or unexpected information
  • Consent issues in testing children
  • Ethical and societal issues in prenatal diagnosis and testing
  • Ethical and social issues in some emerging treatments for genetic disorders
  • The ethics of germline gene modification for gene therapy and genetic enhancement
  • Summary
  • Questions
  • Further Reading
  • Glossary
  • Index
Show More

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Rafbók til eignar

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Genetics and Genomics in Medicine”

Netfang þitt verður ekki birt. Nauðsynlegir reitir eru merktir *

Aðrar vörur

0
    0
    Karfan þín
    Karfan þín er tómAftur í búð