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دسته بندی: ژنتیک ویرایش: نویسندگان: Tom Strachan. Judith Goodship and Patrick Chinnery سری: ISBN (شابک) : 9780815344803 ناشر: Garland Science سال نشر: 2015 تعداد صفحات: 546 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 29 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Genetics and Genomics in Medicine به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب ژنتیک و ژنومیک در پزشکی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
CHAPTER 1 Fundamentals of DNA, Chromosomes, and Cells 1 1.1 The Structure and Function of Nucleic Acids 1 General concepts: the genetic material, genomes, and genes 1 The underlying chemistry of nucleic acids 2 Base pairing and the double helix 3 DNA replication and DNA polymerases 4 Genes, transcription, and the central dogma of molecular biology 6 1.2 The Structure and Function of Chromosomes 7 Why we need highly structured chromosomes, and how they are organized 7 Chromosome function: replication origins, centromeres, and telomeres 8 1.3 DNA and Chromosomes in Cell Division and the Cell Cycle 9 Differences in DNA copy number between cells 9 The cell cycle and segregation of replicated chromosomes and DNA molecules 10 Mitosis: the usual form of cell division 12 Meiosis: a specialized reductive cell division giving rise to sperm and egg cells 12 Why each of our gametes is unique 15 Summary 17 Questions 18 Further Reading 18 CHAPTER 2 Fundamentals of Gene Structure, Gene Expression, and Human Genome Organization 19 2.1 Protein-Coding Genes: Structure and Expression 19 Gene organization: exons and introns 20 RNA splicing: stitching together the genetic information in exons 20 The evolutionary value of RNA splicing 22 Translation: decoding messenger RNA to make a polypeptide 22 The process of translation 22 Transfer RNA as an adaptor RNA 24 Untranslated regions and 5ʹ cap and 3ʹ poly(A) termini 25 From newly synthesized polypeptide to mature protein 26 Chemical modification 26 Folding 28 Cleavage and transport 28 Binding of multiple polypeptide chains 30 2.2 RNA Genes and Noncoding RNA 30 The extraordinary secondary structure and versatility of RNA 31 RNAs that act as specific regulators: from quirky exceptions to the mainstream 32 Long ncRNAs 32 Tiny ncRNAs 33 Competing endogenous RNAs 34 2.3 Working Out the Details of Our Genome and What They Mean 34 The Human Genome Project: working out the details of the nuclear genome 35 Interrogating our genome 36 What the sequence didn’t tell us 36 Identifying genes and other functionally important DNA elements through evolutionary conservation 37 Identifying genes and their orthologs 37 Sequence conservation due to selection 38 The ENCODE Project: functional assays to determine what our genome does 40 Transcript analysis 40 Biochemical signatures 40 The outcome 41 2.4 The Organization and Evolution of the Human Genome 41 A brief overview of the evolutionary mechanisms that shaped our genome 41 How much of our genome is functionally significant? 42 Estimating functional constraint 42 The mitochondrial genome: economical usage but limited autonomy 43 Gene distribution in the human genome 44 The extent of repetitive DNA in the human genome 45 The organization of gene families 46 The significance of gene duplication and repetitive coding DNA 47 Dosage 47 Novel genetic variants 47 Highly repetitive noncoding DNA in the human genome 50 Transposon-derived repeats in the human genome 50 Summary 52 Questions 54 Further Reading 55 CHAPTER 3 Principles Underlying Core DNA Technologies 57 3.1 DNA Cloning and PCR 57 DNA cloning: fractionating and purifying DNA by transforming cells with recombinant DNAs 57 Amplification 58 Vector molecules 58 Physical clone separation 60 Making recombinant DNA 60 DNA libraries and the uses and limitations of DNA cloning 62 The basics of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 62 Quantitative PCR and real-time PCR 63 3.2 Principles of Nucleic Acid Hybridization 65 Formation of artificial heteroduplexes 65 Hybridization assays: using known nucleic acids to find related sequences in a test nucleic acid population 66 Using high and low hybridization stringency 67 Two classes of hybridization assay 67 Microarray hybridization: large-scale parallel hybridization to immobilized probes 69 3.3 Principles of DNA Sequencing 70 Dideoxy DNA sequencing 72 Massively parallel DNA sequencing (next-generation sequencing) 73 Summary 75 Questions 77 Further Reading 78 CHAPTER 4 Principles of Genetic Variation 79 4.1 Origins of DNA Sequence Variation 80 Genetic variation arising from endogenous errors in chromosome and DNA function 81 DNA replication errors 81 Chromosome segregation and recombination errors 82 Various endogenous and exogenous sources can cause damage to DNA by altering its chemical structure 82 Endogenous chemical damage to DNA 82 Chemical damage to DNA caused by external mutagens 85 4.2 DNA Repair 85 Repair of DNA damage or altered sequence on a single DNA strand 86 Repair of DNA lesions that affect both DNA strands 87 Repair of DNA interstrand cross-links 89 Undetected DNA damage, DNA damage tolerance, and translesion synthesis 89 4.3 The Scale of Human Genetic Variation 92 DNA variants, polymorphism, and developing a comprehensive catalog of human genetic variation 92 Single nucleotide variants and single nucleotide polymorphisms 94 The imprecise cut-off between indels and copy number variants 94 Microsatellites and other polymorphisms due to variable number of tandem repeats 95 Structural variation and low copy number variation 96 Taking stock of human genetic variation 97 4.4 Functional Genetic Variation and Protein Polymorphism 97 Most genetic variation has a neutral effect on the phenotype, but a small fraction is harmful 98 Harmful mutations 98 Positive Darwinian selection and adaptive DNA changes in human lineages 99 Adaptations to altered environments 99 Generating protein diversity by gene duplication and alternative processing of a single gene 103 Diversity through gene duplication 104 Post-transcriptionally induced variation 104 4.5 Extraordinary Genetic Variation in the Immune System 104 Pronounced genetic variation in four classes of immune system proteins 105 Random and targeted post-zygotic (somatic) genetic variation 106 Somatic mechanisms that allow cell-specific production of immunoglobulins and T-cell receptors 107 Combinatorial diversity via somatic recombination 107 Additional diversity generation 108 MHC (HLA) proteins: functions and polymorphism 109 Class I MHC proteins 109 Class II MHC proteins 109 MHC restriction 110 MHC polymorphism 110 The medical importance of the HLA system 111 Transplantation and histocompatibility testing 111 HLA disease associations 111 Summary 113 Questions 115 Further Reading 115 CHAPTER 5 Single-Gene Disorders: Inheritance Patterns, Phenotype Variability, and Allele Frequencies 117 5.1 Introduction: Terminology, Electronic Resources, and Pedigrees 118 Background terminology and electronic resources with information on single-gene disorders 118 Alleles and allele combinations 118 Dominant and recessive phenotypes 118 Electronic information on monogenic disorders 118 Investigating family history of disease and recording pedigrees 119 5.2 The Basics of Mendelian and Mitochondrial DNA Inheritance Patterns 120 Autosomal dominant inheritance 120 Autosomal recessive inheritance 121 Consanguinity 121 Disease-related phenotypes in carriers 122 X-linked inheritance and X-chromosome inactivation 122 X-chromosome inactivation 124 X-linked recessive inheritance 124 X-linked dominant inheritance 125 Pseudoautosomal and Y-linked inheritance 126 Pseudoautosomal inheritance 127 Y-linked inheritance 127 Matrilineal inheritance for mitochondrial DNA disorders 128 Variable heteroplasmy and clinical variability 128 5.3 Uncertainty, Heterogeneity, and Variable Expression of Mendelian Phenotypes 129 Difficulties in defining the mode of inheritance in small pedigrees 130 New mutations and mosaicism 130 Post-zygotic mutations and mosaicism 131 Heterogeneity in the correspondence between phenotypes and the underlying genes and mutations 131 Locus heterogeneity 132 Allelic and phenotypic heterogeneity 133 Non-penetrance and age-related penetrance 134 Variable age at onset in late-onset disorders 134 Variable expression of Mendelian phenotypes within families 135 Imprinting 136 Anticipation 136 5.4 Allele Frequencies in Populations 137 Allele frequencies and the Hardy–Weinberg Law 138 The Hardy–Weinberg Law 138 Applications and limitations of the Hardy–Weinberg Law 139 Nonrandom mating 140 Ways in which allele frequencies change in populations 140 Population bottlenecks and founder effects 141 Mutation versus selection in determining allele frequencies 142 Heterozygote advantage: when natural selection favors carriers of recessive disease 144 Distinguishing heterozygote advantage from founder effects 145 Summary 145 Questions 147 Further Reading 148 CHAPTER 6 Principles of Gene Regulation and Epigenetics 149 6.1 Genetic Regulation of Gene Expression 151 Promoters: the major on–off switches in genes 151 Modulating transcription, tissue-specific regulation, enhancers, and silencers 152 Enhancers, silencers, and insulator elements 152 Transcription factor binding 153 Genetic regulation during RNA processing: RNA splicing and RNA editing 154 Regulation of RNA splicing 154 Alternative splicing 155 RNA editing 156 Translational regulation by trans-acting regulatory proteins 156 Post-transcriptional gene silencing by microRNAs 157 Repressing the repressors: competing endogenous RNAs sequester miRNA 159 Circular RNAs as abundant miRNA sponges 160 6.2 Chromatin Modification and Epigenetic Factors in Gene Regulation 160 Changes in chromatin structure producing altered gene expression 161 Modification of histones in nucleosomes 162 The effect of modified histones and histone variants on chromatin structure 164 The function of DNA methylation in mammalian cells 165 DNA methylation: mechanisms, heritability, and global roles during early development and gametogenesis 166 DNA methylation mechanism 166 DNA methylation in early development and gametogenesis 166 Noncoding RNAs in epigenetic regulation 169 Cis- and trans-acting regulation 169 Genomic imprinting: differential expression of maternally and paternally inherited alleles 170 Extent and significance of genome imprinting 171 Establishing sex-specific imprints by differential methylation 171 X-chromosome inactivation: compensating for sex differences in gene dosage 173 X-chromosome counting and inactivation choices 174 XIST RNA and initiation of X-inactivation 174 Escaping X-inactivation 175 Epigenomes and dissecting the molecular basis of epigenetic regulation 175 The International Human Epigenetic Consortium (IHEC) 176 6.3 Abnormal Epigenetic Regulation in Mendelian Disorders and Uniparental Disomy 176 Principles of epigenetic dysregulation 176 ‘Chromatin diseases’ due to mutations in genes specifying chromatin modifiers 178 Rett syndrome: a classical chromatin disease 178 Disease resulting from dysregulation of heterochromatin 179 Inappropriate gene silencing 179 Heterochromatin reduction 179 Uniparental disomy and disorders of imprinting 180 Abnormal gene regulation at imprinted loci 181 Imprinting and assisted reproduction 183 Summary 186 Questions 187 Further Reading 188 CHAPTER 7 Genetic Variation Producing Disease-Causing Abnormalities in DNA and Chromosomes 189 7.1 How Genetic Variation Results in Disease 190 7.2 Pathogenic Nucleotide Substitutions and Tiny Insertions and Deletions 190 Pathogenic single nucleotide substitutions within coding sequences 190 Relative frequencies of silent and amino-acid-replacing substitutions 191 Conservative substitution: replacing an amino acid by a similar one 192 Nonconservative substitutions: effects on the polypeptide/protein 193 Mutations producing premature termination codons and aberrant RNA splicing 194 Pathogenic splicing mutations 194 Genesis and frequency of pathogenic point mutations 197 Mutation rates in the human genome 197 Total pathogenic load 197 Effect of parental age and parental sex on germ-line mutation rates 198 Paternal-age-effect disorders and selfish spermatogonial selection 198 Surveying and curating point mutations that cause disease 199 Point mutations in coding DNA 199 Point mutations in RNA genes and other noncoding DNA 200 Databases of human pathogenic mutations 200 7.3 Moderate- to Large-Scale Pathogenic Mutations Triggered by Repetitive DNA 201 Pathogenic expansion of arrays of short tandem oligonucleotide repeats in coding DNA 202 Pathogenic polyalanine expansion 202 Unstable expansion of CAG repeats encoding polyglutamine 203 Pathogenic unstable expansion of short noncoding tandem repeats 204 Pathogenic sequence exchanges between chromatids at mispaired tandem repeats 205 Pathogenic sequence exchanges between distant repeats in nuclear DNA and in mtDNA 208 Chromosome microdeletions and microduplications 209 Deletions resulting from direct repeats in mtDNA 212 Intrachromatid recombination between inverted repeats 212 7.4 Chromosome Abnormalities 212 Structural chromosomal abnormalities 213 Large-scale duplications, deletions, and inversions 215 Chromosomal translocations 216 Isochromosomes 218 Chromosomal abnormalities involving gain or loss of complete chromosomes 218 Polyploidy 218 Aneuploidy 219 Maternal age effects in Down syndrome 220 Mixoploidy 220 7.5 The Effects of Pathogenic Variants on the Phenotype 220 Mutations affecting how a single gene works: loss-of-function and gain-of-function 221 Loss-of-function mutations 222 Gain-of-function mutations 222 The effect of pathogenic variants depends on how the products of alleles interact: dominance and recessiveness revisited 224 Loss-of-function versus gain-of-function mutations in recessive and dominant disorders 224 Striking loss of function produced by dominant-negative effects in heterozygotes 226 Gain-of-function and loss-of-function mutations in the same gene produce different phenotypes 228 Multiple gene dysregulation resulting from aneuploidies and point mutations in regulatory genes 228 Segmental aneuploidies 229 Contiguous gene syndromes 230 7.6 A Protein Structure Perspective of Molecular Pathology 231 Pathogenesis arising from protein misfolding 231 Regulation of protein folding 231 Aberrant protein folding causing disease 231 How protein aggregation can result in disease 232 Sickle-cell anemia: disruptive protein fibers 232 α1-Antitrypsin deficiency: inclusion bodies and cell death 233 Seeding by aberrant protein templates 233 7.7 Genotype–Phenotype Correlations and Why Monogenic Disorders Are Often Not Simple 236 The difficulty in getting reliable genotype–phenotype correlations 236 Exceptional versus general reasons for poor genotype–phenotype correlations 237 Modifier genes and environmental factors: common explanations for poor genotype–phenotype correlations 237 Modifier genes: the example of β-thalassemia 237 Environmental factors influencing the phenotype of genetic disorders 238 Summary 241 Questions 243 Further Reading 244 CHAPTER 8 Identifying Disease Genes and Genetic Susceptibility to Complex Disease 247 8.1 Identifying Genes in Monogenic Disorders 247 Position-dependent strategies 248 The final step: mutation screening 249 Linkage analysis to map genes for monogenic disorders to defined subchromosomal regions 249 Human genetic maps 249 Principle of genetic linkage 250 Human meiotic recombination frequencies 251 Standard genomewide linkage analyses 252 Autozygosity mapping in extended inbred families 255 Chromosome abnormalities and other large-scale mutations as routes to identifying disease genes 255 Exome sequencing: let’s not bother getting a position for disease genes! 256 8.2 Approaches to Mapping and Identifying Genetic Susceptibility to Complex Disease 259 The polygenic and multifactorial nature of common diseases 259 Complexities in disease risk prediction 259 Difficulties with lack of penetrance and phenotype classification in complex disease 261 Phenotype classification and phenocopies 261 Estimating the contribution made by genetic factors to the variance of complex diseases 262 Family studies 263 Adoption and twin studies 263 Variation in the genetic contribution to disorders 263 Linkage analyses to seek out genes for complex diseases 264 Parametric linkage analyses in Mendelian subsets 264 Nonparametric and affected sib-pair linkage analysis 265 Identifying the disease-susceptibility gene 267 The principle of allelic association 268 Linkage disequilibrium as the basis of allelic associations 269 Sharing of ancestral chromosome segments 272 How genomewide association studies are carried out 273 The transmission disequilibrium test 275 Moving from candidate subchromosomal region to identify causal genetic variants in complex disease 276 Identifying causal variants 277 The limitations of GWA studies and the issue of missing heritability 278 The relative contributions of common and rare variants to complex disease susceptibility 279 The common disease–common variant hypothesis 280 How common deleterious alleles are maintained 280 The common disease–rare variant hypothesis 281 Copy number variants associated with complex diseases 281 CNPs and CNVs in neuropsychiatric disorders 283 Recent explosive growth in human population has meant that most coding sequence variants are rare variants 283 Massively parallel DNA sequencing to identify rare sequence variants associated with complex disease 284 De novo sequence variants 285 The overall contribution made by rare variants 285 8.3 Our Developing Knowledge of the Genetic Architecture of Complex Disease and the Contributions of Environmental and Epigenetic Factors 286 The success and the utility of genomewide association studies 286 The utility of GWA studies 287 Assessment and prediction of disease risk 287 New insights into biological pathways in complex diseases may offer new approaches in classifying and treating disease 289 The pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease 289 Connections between different disease pathways 293 Protective factors and the basis of genetic resistance to infectious disease 293 Gene–gene interaction (epistasis) in complex disease 295 Gene–environment interactions in complex disease 296 A plethora of ‘environmental factors’ 296 Prospective cohort studies 297 Epigenetics in complex disease and aging: significance and experimental approaches 297 Experimental investigations 300 Epigenetic changes during aging 300 Epigenetic changes in monozygotic twins 301 The developmental origins of adult health and disease 301 Transgenerational epigenetic effects 302 Summary 302 Questions 305 Further Reading 306 CHAPTER 9 Genetic Approaches to Treating Disease 309 9.1 An Overview of Treating Genetic Disease and of Genetic Treatment of Disease 310 Three different broad approaches to treating genetic disorders 310 Augmentation therapy for genetic deficiencies 310 Applicability of molecular augmentation therapy 311 Treatment for disorders producing positively harmful effects 312 Treatment by altering disease susceptibility 312 Very different treatment options for different inborn errors of metabolism 313 Two broad phenotype classes 313 Augmentation therapy 313 Treating or preventing harmful effects of elevated metabolites 314 Mixed success in treatment 314 Genetic treatment of disease may be conducted at many different levels 316 9.2 Genetic Inputs into Treating Disease with Small Molecule Drugs and Therapeutic Proteins 317 Small molecule drugs 318 New approaches 318 An overview of how genetic differences affect the metabolism and performance of small molecule drugs 319 Different stages at which genetic variation influences drug metabolism 319 Phase I and phase II reactions in drug metabolism 320 Phenotype differences arising from genetic variation in drug metabolism 320 Genetic variation in cytochrome P450 enzymes in phase I drug metabolism 321 Genetic variation in CYP2D6 and its consequences 322 Genetic variation in other cytochrome P450 enzymes 323 Genetic variation in enzymes that work in phase II drug metabolism 324 Altered drug responses resulting from genetic variation in drug targets 325 When genotypes at multiple loci in patients are important in drug treatment: the example of warfarin 326 Translating genetic advances: from identifying novel disease genes to therapeutic small molecule drugs 327 Cystic fibrosis: not an easy prospect 328 Familial hypercholesterolemia: new and valuable drugs 330 Marfan syndrome: advantages of a mouse model 331 Tuberous sclerosis: from a biological pathway to a promising drug 331 Translating genomic advances and developing generic drugs as a way of overcoming the problem of too few drug targets 332 Translating genomic advances 332 Developing generic drugs 332 Developing different drugs: therapeutic recombinant proteins produced by genetic engineering 333 Genetically engineered therapeutic antibodies with improved therapeutic potential 333 Genetically engineered antibodies 334 Intrabodies 335 9.3 Principles of Gene and Cell Therapy 336 Two broad strategies in somatic gene therapy 337 The delivery problem: designing optimal and safe strategies for getting genetic constructs into the cells of patients 338 Efficiency and safety aspects 338 Different ways of delivering therapeutic genetic constructs, and the advantages of ex vivo gene therapy 342 In vivo and ex vivo gene therapy 342 Nonviral systems for delivering therapeutic genetic constructs: safety at the expense of efficiency 343 Viral delivery of therapeutic gene constructs: relatively high efficiency but safety concerns 345 Integrating and non-integrating viral vectors 345 The importance of disease models for testing potential therapies in humans 346 When rodent disease models can be inadequate 347 9.4 Gene Therapy for Inherited Disorders and Infectious Disease: Practice and Future Directions 350 Multiple successes for ex vivo gene augmentation therapy targeted at hematopoietic stem cells 350 Safety issues in gammaretroviral integration 351 Increased safety profiles using lentiviral vectors 353 In vivo gene therapy: approaches, barriers, and recent successes 354 Delivery using adenovirus and adeno-associated virus vectors 354 Amenability of disorders to in vivo gene therapy 354 Two recent examples of successful in vivo gene therapy 355 Complex disease applications: the example of Parkinson disease 355 RNA targeting therapies: gene silencing by RNA interference and modulation of RNA splicing 357 Gene-silencing therapy using RNA interference 357 Modulation of splicing 357 Future prospects and new approaches: therapeutic stem cells, cell reprogramming, and genome editing 359 Therapeutic embryonic stem cells 362 Therapeutic induced pluripotent stem cells 362 Therapeutic cell reprogramming by transdifferentation 363 Therapeutic genome editing 363 The prospect of germ-line gene therapy to prevent mitochondrial DNA disorders 366 Summary 366 Questions 369 Further Reading 370 CHAPTER 10 Cancer Genetics and Genomics 373 10.1 Fundamental Characteristics and Evolution of Cancer 373 The defining features of unregulated cell growth and cancer 373 Cancer as a battle between natural selection operating at the level of the cell and of the organism 375 The balance between cell proliferation and cell death 376 Why we do not all succumb to cancer 377 Cancer cells acquire several distinguishing biological characteristics during their evolution 377 The initiation and multi-stage nature of cancer evolution and why most human cancers develop over many decades 380 Clonal expansion and successive driver mutations 381 Cancer development through accelerated mutation 382 Mutation accumulation and age of cancer onset 382 Intratumor heterogeneity arises through cell infiltration, clonal evolution, and differentiation of cancer stem cells 383 10.2 Oncogenes and Tumor Suppressor Genes 385 Two fundamental classes of cancer gene 385 Viral oncogenes and the natural roles of cellular oncogenes 387 Oncogene activation: chromosomal rearrangements resulting in increased gene expression or gain-of-function mutations 388 Activation by gene amplification 388 Translocation-induced gene activation 389 Gain-of-function mutations 391 Tumor suppressor genes: normal functions, the two-hit paradigm, and loss of heterozygosity in linked markers 391 Familial cancers and the two-hit paradigm 391 Loss of heterozygosity 393 The key roles of gatekeeper tumor suppressor genes in suppressing G1–S transition in the cell cycle 394 The additional role of p53 in activating different apoptosis pathways to ensure that rogue cells are destroyed 395 Rare familial cancers and the need for a revision of the classical two-hit tumor suppressor paradigm 397 Haploinsufficiency and gain-of-function mutations 398 A revised model for tumor suppression 398 The significance of miRNAs and long noncoding RNAs in cancer 398 10.3 Genomic Instability and Epigenetic Dysregulation in Cancer 399 An overview of genome and epigenome instability in cancer 399 Different types of chromosomal instability in cancer 402 Chromothripsis 402 Telomeres and chromosome stability 403 Deficiency in mismatch repair results in unrepaired replication errors and global DNA instability 404 The mechanism of mismatch repair 405 Consequences of defective mismatch repair 405 Epigenetic dysregulation in cancer and its effects on gene expression and genome stability 406 Aberrant DNA methylation 407 Genome–epigenome interactions 407 10.4 New Insights from Genomewide Studies of Cancers 408 Genomewide gene expression screens to enable clinically useful gene expression signatures 408 Clinical applications 409 Genome sequencing reveals extraordinary mutational diversity in tumors and insights into cancer evolution 411 Mutation number 411 Mutational processes and cancer evolution 412 Intertumor and intratumor heterogeneity 413 Defining the landscape of driver mutations in cancer and the quest to establish a complete inventory of cancer-susceptibility genes 414 Cancer gene and driver mutation distribution 416 Novel cancer-susceptibility genes 417 Non-classical cancer genes linking metabolism to the epigenome 417 10.5 Genetic Inroads into Cancer Therapy 418 Treatment or prevention? 419 The efficacy of cancer therapy 419 The different biological capabilities of cancer cells afford many different potential therapeutic entry points 420 Targeted cancer therapy after genetic studies define a precise molecular focus for therapy 422 The molecular basis of tumor recurrence and the evolution of drug resistance in cancers 423 The basis of tumor recurrence 423 The evolution of drug resistance 424 Combinatorial drug therapies 424 Summary 424 Questions 427 Further Reading 427 CHAPTER 11 Genetic Testing from Genes to Genomes, and the Ethics of Genetic Testing and Therapy 431 11.1 An Overview of Genetic Testing 432 Evaluating genetic tests 432 Genetic testing: direct genotyping assays, mutation scanning, downstream assays, and indirect linkage analyses 432 Indirect linkage analyses 433 Different levels at which genetic testing can be carried out 434 11.2 The Technology of Genetic Testing for Chromosome Abnormalities and Large-Scale DNA Changes 435 Detecting aneuploidies with the use of quantitative fluorescence PCR 436 Principles of quantitative fluorescence PCR 436 Autosomal aneuploidies 436 Sex chromosome aneuploidies 437 Noninvasive fetal aneuploidy screening 438 Detecting large-scale DNA copy number changes with the use of microarray-based genomic copy number analysis 438 Array comparative genome hybridization (aCGH) 438 SNP microarray hybridization 439 Unclassified variants and incidental findings 440 The need for conventional karyotyping and chromosome FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) 441 Chromosome FISH 441 DNA technologies for detecting pathogenic changes in copy number of specific DNA sequences 442 Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) 445 11.3 The Technology of Genetic Testing for Small-Scale DNA Changes 446 Scanning for undefined point mutations in single and multiple genes, and in whole exomes and genomes 447 Gene-specific microarray-based mutation scanning 447 Multiplex mutation scanning: multiple genes to whole exomes 447 Interpreting sequence variants and the problem of variants of uncertain clinical significance 451 Mutation interpretation and databases 452 Variants of uncertain clinical significance 453 Scanning for possible pathogenic changes in cytosine methylation patterns 454 Technologies for genotyping a specific point mutation or SNP 455 Multiplex genotyping of specific disease-associated variants as a form of mutation scanning 456 11.4 Genetic Testing: Organization of Services and Practical Applications 458 Genetic testing of affected individuals and their close relatives 458 Cascade testing 459 Traditional prenatal diagnosis uses fetal tissue samples recovered by an invasive procedure 460 Preimplantation genetic testing often analyzes a single cell in the context of assisted reproduction (in vitro fertilization) 460 Noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT) and whole fetal genome screening 464 Technological breakthroughs 464 From fetal aneuploidy screening to genome screening 465 Pre-symptomatic and predictive testing for single-gene disorders in asymptomatic individuals 465 Pre-symptomatic testing without medical intervention 466 An overview of the different types and levels of genetic screening 466 Maternal screening for fetal abnormalities 467 Newborn screening to allow early medical intervention 469 Benefits versus disadvantages 470 Carrier screening for disease prevention in serious autosomal recessive disorders 470 Screening for β-thalassemia 470 Community screening for Tay–Sachs disease 471 New genomic technologies are beginning to transform cancer diagnostics 471 Multiplex testing using targeted genome sequencing 472 Noninvasive cancer testing 473 Genetic testing for complex disease and direct-to-consumer genetic testing 474 11.5 Ethical Considerations and Societal Impact of Genetic Testing and Genetic Approaches to Treating Disease 474 Consent issues in genetic testing 475 Consent issues in testing children 475 Problems with sharing of genetic information and the limits on confidentiality 476 Ethical and societal issues in prenatal diagnosis and testing 477 Preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) 477 Restrictions on genetic testing as a result of gene patenting 477 Genetic discrimination and ethical, societal, and practical issues raised by clinical genomewide sequencing 478 Incidental findings 479 Neonatal genome sequencing 481 The ethics of genetic manipulation of the germ line to prevent disease or to enhance normal human traits 482 Genetic enhancement and designer babies 482 Ethical considerations and societal sensitivity to three-person IVF treatment for mitochondrial DNA disorders 483 Summary 484 Questions 486 Further Reading 487 Glossary 489 Index 503