János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences(TKP2021-NVA-15)
(Open access funding provided by Semmelweis University)
The research of Mendel, born two centuries ago, still has many direct implications
for our everyday clinical work. He introduced the terms “dominant” and “recessive”
characters and determined their 3:1 ratio in the offspring of heterozygous “hybrid”
plants. This distribution allowed calculation of the number of the phenotype-determining
“elements,” i.e., the alleles, and has been used ever since to prove the monogenic
origin of a disorder. The Mendelian inheritance of monogenic kidney disorders is still
of great help in distinguishing them from those with multifactorial origin in clinical
practice. Inheritance of most monogenic kidney disorders fits to Mendel’s observations:
the equal contribution of the two parents and the complete penetrance or the direct
correlation between the frequency of the recessive character and the degree of inbreeding.
Nevertheless, beyond the truth of these basic concepts, several observations have
expanded their genetic characteristics. The extreme genetic heterogeneity, the pleiotropy
of the causal genes and the role of modifiers in ciliopathies, the digenic inheritance
and parental imprinting in some tubulopathies, and the incomplete penetrance and eventual
interallelic interactions in podocytopathies, reflect this expansion. For all these
reasons, the transmission pattern in a natural setting may depend not only on the
“character” but also on the causal gene and the variant. Mendel’s passion for research
combined with his modest personality and meticulous approach can still serve as an
example in the work required to understand the non-Mendelian universe of genetics.