100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary Genetics in Medicine Thompson chapter 5-7 $4.05   Add to cart

Summary

Summary Genetics in Medicine Thompson chapter 5-7

4 reviews
 948 views  8 purchases
  • Course
  • Institution
  • Book

Coverage of chapter 5-7. Principles of cytogenetics, Disorders of autosomes and sex chromosomes (incl. images and examples!) and Patterns of single cell inheritance.

Preview 3 out of 22  pages

  • No
  • Chapter 5 t/m 7
  • October 10, 2012
  • 22
  • 2011/2012
  • Summary

4  reviews

review-writer-avatar

By: sjackson3487 • 1 year ago

review-writer-avatar

By: theresatom11 • 2 year ago

review-writer-avatar

By: rebeccaabraham27 • 4 year ago

review-writer-avatar

By: mja999rb • 6 year ago

avatar-seller
Chapter 5: Principles of Clinical Cytogenetics
Clinical indications for chromosome analysis

• Problems of early growth and development
• Stillbirth or neonatal death
• Fertility problems
• Family history
• Neoplasia
• Pregnancy in female of advanced age (>35y)

Methods

• Peripheral blood is mixed with heparin to prevent clotting
• WBCs are collected, placed in tissue culture medium and stimulated to divide
• After few days cells are arrested in metaphase by chemicals, then collected and treated
with a hypotonic solution to release the chromosomes
• Chromosomes are then fixed, spread on slides and stained: ready for analysis

NB: cell cultures from peripheral blood have disadvantage of being short-lived (3-4 days),
but can be transformed to lymphoblastoid cell lines. Alternative is skin fibroblast cell lines.
Bone marrow is invasive, but requires little or no culture.




Chromosome identification

Karyotyping
• G-banding (Giemsa) most widely used  in metaphase 400 bands per haploid karyotype
(minimum resolution of aberration detected is 5 Mb)
o G dark bands are AT rich, gene poor, late replicating and chromatin is more
condensed
o G pale bands are GC rich, gene rich and early replicating
• Alternative banding techniques:
o Q banding (limited use because fluorescent microscope needed)/ R banding
(inverse of G banding)/ C (centromere) banding/ high-resolution banding (in
prometaphase 550 bands or prophase 850 bands)/ NOR staining (analysis of
acrocentric short arms)
 C-banding and NOR staining substituted by FISH
• 3 chromosome types are distinguished, depending on position of centromere:
o (Sub)metacentric: arms of approx. equal length
o Acrocentric: centromere near one end and small masses of chromatin known as
satellites, containing ribosomal RNA + repetitive sequences (human chr
13,14,15,21,22)

13

,  Satellite regions can be involved in polymorphism as CNV
o Telocentric: centromere at one end and only a single arm (does not occur in
normal human karyotype




FISH
• See earlier
• Confluence of genomic and cytogenetic approach  molecular cytogenetics
• Deletion is easy to spot; but tandem duplication not visible in metaphase visible in
interphase
• Fiber FISH: used mainly in research to characterize very small fragments by stretching
the DNA

Microarrays (aCGH)
• provides much more sensitive, high-resolution assessment of the genome, but without
info on translocation or rearrangements (e.g. inversion)
• Deletion = 1 copy versus 2 = 1/2 log2(1/2)=-1
• Duplication = 3 copies versus 2 = 3/2  log2(3/2)=0.58
• detects lots of benign CNVs/ polymorphisms, particularly common in subtelomeric and
centromeric regions
these collectively underscore uniqueness of an individual genome
• SNP array: applied for indels and detecting LOH-regions and UPD

QMPSF
= Quantitative Multiplex PCR of Short Fluorescent Fragments

MLPA
• = Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification
• Applications: telomeres screening, multiple genomic disorders screening, aneuploidy
screening and high resolution screening for specific disease

Chromosome abnormalities

Abnormalities in chromosome number
• Aneuploidy = abnormal number of chromosomes (5% of pregnancies)
o Commonly caused by meiotic nondisjunction in meiosis I (see fig 5-7)
o ~15% of all pregnancies result in spontaneous abortion  50% of these have an
aneuploidy
o Monosomies are generally not viable (except 45,X). Trisomies are viable for chr
13,18,21,X,Y
 Selection in utero  abortion in >90% of aneuploidies




14

, • reciprocal translocation = exchange of segments between non-homologous
chromosomes  usually no phenotypic effect, but may be associated with higher risk of
abnormal offspring [chromosome # can be normal or changed)
• polyploidy = increase in the multiple of a haploid set (3n,4n)
o arises through error at or post fertilization
• Triploidy (3n): can be liveborn, but don’t survive long
o If extra set is paternal: abnormal placenta and partial hydatidiform moles
o If extra set is maternal: early spontaneous abortion
o Very rarely live birth, but then death within a day
• Tetraploid (4n): occasionally observed




Abnormalities of chromosome structure
• Present in ~1 in 375 newborns (less common than aneuploidy pregnancies)
• Stable (functional centromere+2 telomeres) versus unstable
• Balanced versus unbalanced

Balanced aberrations:
• Inversion
 Usually normal phenotype, but risk of offspring with unbalanced
karyotype (resulting from loop in meiosis)
 E.g. inv(9)(p11q12): present in ~1% of population and considered
normal variant
o Paracentric (not incl. centromere)  both breaks on one arm (freq 0.009-
0.049%)
 Very low risk of life-born unbalanced offspring
o Pericentric (incl centromere)  a break in each arm (freq 0.12-0.7%)
 Small inversions produce recombinants with large deletions/duplications
 high risk of miscarriage
 Large inversions produce recombinants with small
deletions/duplications  higher risk of viable abnormal offspring
• Balanced translocation
 Carriers can produce high frequency of unbalanced gametes  offspring
with unbalanced karyotype (risk 1-20%; most imbalances will not
implant or will be spontaneously lost during gestation)
 Chromosome break can disrupt a gene  phenotype
 Cave microdeletion/-duplication  phenotype!
o Reciprocal translocation


15

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller genetica. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $4.05. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

79650 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$4.05  8x  sold
  • (4)
  Add to cart