Chromosome Abnormalities Flashcards
Chromosome analysis
- 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
KARYOTYPING
- systematic sorting of chromosomes
- metaphase chromosomes are stained, paired up and then grouped together
- abnormalities described using standard nomenclature ISCN
Chromosome morphology
- 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)
Chromosome groups
- chromosomes are grouped according to size and shape
G-banding staining
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
Automated karyotyping
The chromosomes are analysed and then paired up automatically on the screen
Cytogenetic analysis (e.g. KARYOTYPING)
- 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)
Referral reasons
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
Prenatal diagnosis methods
Chorionic villus sampling
- 11-12 weeks gestation (1.2% increased risk of miscarriage)
Amniocentesis
- 15 weeks onwards (0.8% miscarriage risk)
Prenatal diagnosis
- 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
Birth defects
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)
Polyploidy
- 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
Aneuploidy (abnormal number of chromosomes in a cell e.g. 45 or 47 when there should be 46)
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)
DNA packaging
- 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
Anaphase lag
- 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