Submitted by Altranite- t3_11damcv in askscience
So we hopefully know that people can carry some genetic mutation as a heterozygote and have minimal (or no) symptoms, but potential offspring who are homozygous will then show the associated disease with worse symptoms, this is common. But I wonder if there are examples of genetic diseases where the heterozygous condition is actually more severe than the homozygote? Say if a single mutant allele incorrectly activates some pathway relative to wild type, whereas in the homozygote this creates such a large change that the cell responds and the net effect is minimal? Or if two different protein variants interfere with each others’ function, whereas again this potentially does not occur in the wt or homozygote? This could be a loss of function or gain of function effect on the protein. I am not thinking about sex linked genes, only autosomal, or compound mutants where the other allele is affected by a second variant.
jubears09 t1_ja8qpu7 wrote
Yes; the best studied mechanism for this is cellular interference.
PCDH19 is the classic human disease example. It's a protocadherin (cell surface protein that affects migration, signaling, etc) on the X chromosome. When both normal and abnormal PCDH19 is present (XX heterozygotes) affected individuals have epilepsy and developmental delay because neurons with different variants behave differently and have trouble forming networks with each other. XY males, regardless of whether there is a mutant or wt allele are normal. XXY males or mosaic males have the same phenotype as heterozygous females.
This is an illustration: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK98182/figure/depienne.f4/
EFNB1 is another example: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605834/
OLD paper postulating this: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1686061/
Edit: I know you said you're not interested in sex chromosomes, but this disease mechanism applies just as easily to autosomal genes. We can predict based on males that a true mutant homozygote would be unaffected while a compound heterozygote would be affected.
The problem with finding an autosomal example is being homozygous outside of a consanguinous situation is exceedingly improbable. Not only do both alleles need to develop a disease causing mutation, but they need to mutate in the same way by chance. Most recessive diseases we see are caused by a compound heterozygous state; which while not wild type, it also not homozygous.