Chromosome Abnormalities Flashcards

1
Q

Chromosome analysis

A
  • METAPHASE chromosome analysis
  • need living cells for in vitro growth (bone marrow, blood, amnionic fluid, cvs and solid tissue) different samples yield different length chromosomes
  • check number and pairs of chromosomes to check that the bandings match
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2
Q

KARYOTYPING

A
  • systematic sorting of chromosomes
  • metaphase chromosomes are stained, paired up and then grouped together
  • abnormalities described using standard nomenclature ISCN
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3
Q

Chromosome morphology

A
  • chromosomes have 2 arms (petite - p arm and long - q arm)
    Metacentric
  • arms of almost equal length
    Sub-metacentric
  • p arm is shorted than the q arm
    Acrocentric
  • p arm is shorted than the q arm - no longer connected
  • no euchromatic material in the p arm (no genes of importance)
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4
Q

Chromosome groups

A
  • chromosomes are grouped according to size and shape
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5
Q

G-banding staining

A

Trypsin digests the proteins
Stained with Romanowski type dye
Produces dark and light bands
- dark G+ve bands are AT rich (gene poor)
- light G-ve bands are GC rich (gene rich)
Dark and light bands are numbered according to international convention

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6
Q

Automated karyotyping

A

The chromosomes are analysed and then paired up automatically on the screen

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7
Q

Cytogenetic analysis (e.g. KARYOTYPING)

A
  • accurate diagnosis/prognosis of clinical problems
    (Identify the syndrome associated with abnormality, account for phenotype, account for pregnancy losses)
  • better clinical management
    (e.g. hormone treatment for Klinefelter syndrome XXY)
  • assess future productive risk
    (Risk of live bind abnormal child, previous downs pregnancy increases the risk of another by 1%)
  • prenatal diagnosis
    (risk of affected pregnancy and/or planning for management at birth)
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8
Q

Referral reasons

A
Constitutional abnormalities 
- prenatal diagnosis 
- birth defects 
- abnormal sexual development 
- infertility 
- recurrent fetal loss
Acquired abnormalities 
- leukaemias 
- solid tumours 
- specific translocations/abnormalities can give prognostic information
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9
Q

Prenatal diagnosis methods

A

Chorionic villus sampling
- 11-12 weeks gestation (1.2% increased risk of miscarriage)
Amniocentesis
- 15 weeks onwards (0.8% miscarriage risk)

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10
Q

Prenatal diagnosis

A
  • maternal serum screening for Down’s syndrome
  • first trimester screening - biochemical and ultrasound scan
  • FH chromosome abnormality
  • abnormal ultrasound scan (cystic hygroma, cleft lip/palate, heart abnormalities
  • DNA studies
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11
Q

Birth defects

A

Dysmorphism
Congenital malformations
Mental retardation
Development delay (abnormal behaviour, learning difficulties)
Specific syndromes (Down syndrome - trisomy 21, williams syndrome - deletion 7q11.23, digeorge syndrome - deletion 22q11.2)
Aneuploidy - loss or gain off a whole chromosome (due to errors at cell division in meiosis)
Trisomies - Down syndrome +21, Patau syndrome +13, Edwards +18
Monosomies - Turner syndrome 45,X (only full monosomy will be viable - inactivation of X)

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12
Q

Polyploidy

A
  • gain of a whole haploid set of chromosomes (3n -69,XXX)
    Most common cause of polyploidy is polyspermy - one egg fertilised by more than one sperm
    Triploidy occurs in 2-3% of all pregnancies and ~15% of all miscarriages - term deliveries die shortly after birth

Tetraploidy is rarer 1-2% but tetraploid cells are often found at prenatal diagnosis as a cultural artefact
Diploid/triploid mosaicism (same genetic position with different genetic makeup) seen in live births

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13
Q

Aneuploidy (abnormal number of chromosomes in a cell e.g. 45 or 47 when there should be 46)

A

Originates from non-disjunction (failure of sister chromatids or homologous chromosomes to separate properly during cell division)
Forms gametes with a missing chromosome and an extra chromosome (which chromosomes involves will influence viability)
Can occur during mitotic cell division (causes mosaicism)

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14
Q

DNA packaging

A
  • DNA is wrapped around an octamer of histones (166bp per octamer) - protein structure = chromatin
    Chromatin can switch back and forth between active (methylated) and inactive (demethylated)
    epigenetic modification - changes to DNA methylation but not to the DNA sequence
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15
Q

Anaphase lag

A
  • chromosomes can be left behind at cell division because of defects in spindle function or attachment to chromosomes
  • the lagging chromosome may be lost entirely in mitosis or meiosis
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16
Q

Trisomy 21

Down syndrome

A
Frequency 1:650-1000
- hypotonia (reduced muscle strength) 
- characteristic facial features 
- intellectual disability 
- heart defects 
- increased prevalence of leukaemia and early Alzheimers
-
17
Q

Trisomy 18

Edwards syndrome

A
1:6000 - female predominance (maternal meiosis II error) modal lifespan 5-15 days 
Diagnosis made prenatally 
- small lower jaw
- prominent occiput (back of the head) 
- low set ears
- rocker bottom feet 
- overlapping fingers
18
Q

Trisomy 13

Patau syndrome

A
1:12000
Multiple congenital abnormalities 
Polydactyly - more fingers or toes 
Holoprosencephaly - facial disfigurement
Majority die in neonatal period
19
Q

Turner syndrome 45,X

A

1: 2500
- puffy feet
- redundant skin at the back of the neck
- Short statue, heart defects, mild learning difficulties, neck webbing, infertility

20
Q

X chromosome inactivation

A
  • only one X chromosomes is active in a human cell
  • X inactivation ensure that individuals have same X chromosome that is active
    Males have two pseudo-autosomal regions (PAR1 and PAR2)
21
Q

Mosaicism

A

Presence of two or more cell lines in an individual (

- usually caused by mitotic non-disjunction