Disorders of Chromosome organization, Cytogenetics Flashcards
What is cytogenetics?
the study of chromosomes and their structures and variations in their structures
Chromosomes hold all of our DNA. They are very complex. How is the DNA strand compacted to fit into a cell?
Each chromosome made up of a single, continuous DNA
double helix.
Chromosomes organized as chromatin a complex of 5 types of histones (basic proteins) plus heterogenous non- histone proteins and DNA.
DNA wrapped around the histone protein complexes.
DNA-histone complex is called a nucleosome. Nucleosomes are arranged like beads on a string.
Each core nucleosome + spacer contains about 200
base pairs of DNA.
What are the different ways you can stain chromosomes? What is the most common method?
G-banding Giemsa is the most common.
- Dark regions are heterochromatic and AT-rich
- Light regions are euchromatic and GC-rich
C-banding focuses on the centromere of the chromosomes.
R-banding reverse is the opposite of the G-banding.
The Q and P arms of a chromosome represent what?
P arms= short arms
Q arms= long arms
What are acrocentric chromosomes and what are the examples of them?
Chromosomes without P arms (short arms)
Chromosome 13, 14, 15, 21, 22 are example
What are acrocentric chromosomes and what are the examples of them?
Chromosomes without significant P arms (short arms)
Chromosome 13, 14, 15, 21, 22 are example
What does 1q31 and 8p23 denote?
They denote genes that are on chromosome 1, short arm at location “three one” not 31. Gene is on chromosome 8, long arm, at location “two three”.
What is the difference between meiosis and mitosis?
Mitosis occur in somatic cells with production of identical daughter cells.
Meiosis occurs in germ cells with four daughter cells that are haploid. This is the process that leads to your gametes.
If nondisjunction occurs in meiosis I, none of the daughter cells are normal. True of false?
True!!
If nondisjunction occurs in meiosis II, then only 2 daughter cells are normal.
There are some genes that are expressed ONLY if they are inherited maternally OR paternally. What is this called?
Imprinting is normal.
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon that causes genes to be expressed in a parent-of-origin-specific manner.
Pseudoautosomal regions (PAR) of human X and Y chromosomes are located on both ends of the X and Y chromosome. PAR 1 and PAR 2 are located specifically where on the sex chromosomes?
The pseudoautosomal regions (PAR1 and PAR2) of the human X and Y chromosomes pair and recombine during meiosis. Thus genes in this region are not inherited in a strictly sex-linked fashion. PAR1 is located at the terminal region of the short arms and PAR2 at the tips of the long arms of these chromosomes.
What is lyonization?
X-inactivation (also called lyonization) is a process by which one of the copies of the X chromosome present in female mammals is inactivated. The inactive X chromosome is silenced by it being packaged in such a way that it has a transcriptionally inactive structure called heterochromatin
About 50% of miscarriage or spontaneous abortion are due to this?
aneuploidy
Aneuploidy is the presence of an abnormal number of chromosomes in a cell, for example a human cell having 45 or 47 chromosomes instead of the usual 46. It does not include a difference of one or more complete sets of chromosomes.
There is a higher probability of nondisjunction in women with increasing age. True or false?
True
in the continued formation of our egg there is a higher chance of nondisjunction
The likelihood of there being trisomy at the various stages of pregnancies decreases as the pregnancy continues. Why?
there is an increased risk of miscarriages
What is the difference between triploidy and trisomy?
polyploidy: variation in # chromosome sets
aneuploidy: differences in chromosome number (not sets of chromosomes)
Diandry is the most common form of triploidy where two sperm fertilize one normal ovum. This may be due to genetically determined weakness of what?
zona pellucida which is responsible for regulating interactions between ovulated eggs and free-swimming sperm during and following fertilization (prevent another sperm from attaching an ovum that has already attached to a sperm)
Which describes the rare occurrence of a diploid sperm (complete nondisjunction during spermatogenesis) fertilizing an egg to form a partial hydatidiform mole?
diandry ( a triploidy)
partial hydatidiform mole: chorionic villi of placenta degenerate and form fluid-filled sacs; placenta is large; usually aborted in the first trimester
Syndactyly of third and fourth fingers are classic presentation of what triploidy due to normal sperm fertilizing a binucleate diploid oocyte?
digyny
A complete mole exists when the male chromosome complement doubles in the female ovum in effort to salvage the fertilization due to no female chromosome complement. This fertilization results in? What type of rescue occured?
complete paternal uniparental disomy
monosomy rescue
More commonly due to doubling of haploid sperm at fertilization of anucleate egg
uniparental disomy occurs when both copies of a chromosome are inherited from the same parent
There are three forms of nondisjunction: failure of a pair of homologous chromosomes to separate in meiosis I, failure of sister chromatids to separate during meiosis II, and failure of sister chromatids to separate during mitosis. Nondisjunction results in daughter cells with abnormal chromosome numbers termed?
aneuploidy
What is the difference between complete and partial mole?
Moles are an abnormal product of conception in which the chorionic villi are hydropic and hypoplastic and have a predilection to become malignant. There are two types of moles, complete and partial. Complete moles have no fetal development or no villi, whereas in partial moles, there is fetal development, but the villi are abnormal. The chromosomal complement in complete moles is 46,XX with the entire complement of androgenic origin. Partial moles are triploid (69 chromosomes) with two of the three complements paternal in origin.
X-inactivation does not affect the whole chromosome. Inactivation is________, but the effect is permanent in all resulting daughter cells
# X’s = Barr bodies + 1
random
Expression of X-linked recessive diseases such as DMD and hemophilia A in females are usually milder to due this genetic process. This process is also responsible for females having higher expression levels of steroid sulfatase.
lyonization AKA X-inactivation
Effects of lyonization:
-Dosage compensation
-A few genes on X escape inactivation
Pseudoautosomal region
A few genes outside the PAR are similar, but do not participate in crossing over
-A few genes outside of PAR that do not have a similar copy on the Y and therefore females have higher expression levels
Steroid sulfatase
In some cells, its our paternal X being expressed and in other cells its our maternal X being expressed. True or false?
True!
Even though the risk of down syndrome per age is higher, only 9-10% of all pregnancies happen in women over 35%. So there’s so many more women under 35 having children that the opportunity for down syndrome to occur from pregnancies is that much more.
Thus a 20 year old female can have a child with down syndrome. It is not uncommon.
What is the most common aneuploidy with epicanthic folds in eyes are a common characteristic phenotype and individuals affected can grow well into adulthood?
trisomy 21 AKA down syndrome