Structural chromosomal abnormalities Flashcards
what are the 2 types of translocation
reciprocal
robertsonian
what does translocation mean
exchange of two segments between non-homologous chromosome
what is the name give to the DNA repair mechanism whereby they rejoin the broken double stranded DNA
Non-homologous end joining (NHEJ)
What happens when NHEJ goes wrong
the end joining occurs but onto different chromosomes creating derivative chromosomes
there is no net gain or loss
How does translocation effect aligning of chromosomes during meiosis
Homologous chromosomes usually align as bivalent structures during metaphase 1, however since a translocation took place it means that it will align as a tetravalent structure. this is because the chromosomes segment must align with its complement homologous chromosome segment
Result of unbalanced reciprocal translocation
-Many lead to miscarriage (hence why a woman with a high number of unexplained
miscarriages should be screened for a balanced translocation)
-Learning difficulties, physical disabilities
-Tend to be specific to each individual so exact risks and clinical features vary
What is robertsonian translocation
- only occurs in acrocentric chromosome
- the p arms are chopped off and lost . Then the q arms are stuck together instead
- balanced carrier has 45 chromosomes and will be healthy because there is still a copy of both the q arm
- However if there are 46 chromosomes including robertonian then it will be unbalanced
- p arms encode rRNA
- trivalent alignment
2 ways Trisomy 21 can arise and how will it look different on a karyotype
NDJ and Robertsonian
in NDJ there will be 3 chromosome present together
In robertsonian there will 2 chromosomes together with an extra on translocated chromosomes (e.g. chromosome 14)
5 other structural chromosomal changes changes
- terminal deletion
- interstitial deletion
- inversion
- duplication
- ring chromosomes
Deletions
-1 :7000 live births
-Deletion may be terminal or interstitial
-Causes a region of monosomy
-Haploinsufficiency Of some genes
-Contiguous gene syndronme (multiple, unrelated clinical features)
-Phenotype is specific for size and place on deletion
Gross deletions seen on metaphase spread on G-banded karyotype
Microdeletions
- Many patients had no abnormality visible on rnetaphase spread
- High resolution banding, FISH and now CGH showed ‘micro’ deletions
- Only a few genes may be lost or gained
- Velocardiofacial (DiGeorge), 22q11
- Wolf-Hirschhorn, 4p16
- Williarns, 7q11
- Snith-Magenis, 17p11
sources of sample for karyotyping for prenatal and postnatal
prenatal --amniocentesis -chorionic villus sampling --cell-free fetal DNA postnatal --blood saliva
Chromosome staining
- most common = G-banding
- G =Giemsa
Why does bands form in chromosome staining
- chromatin
- 2 different sorts: euchromatin & heterochromatin
- Euchromatin GC-rich; loosely packed; genes active
- Heterochromatin = AT-rich; tightly packed; genes inactive
- Stain differently
process of chromosomes staining work
-5ml venous blood taken
-add phytohemagglutinin and culture medium
-culture at 37 degree for 3 days
-add colchicine and hypotonic saline
-cells fixed
spread cell onto slide by dropping
-digest with trypsin and stain giemsa
-analyse metaphase spread
-karyotype