首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Summary The parental origin of the additional sex chromosome was studied in 47 cases with an XXY sex chromosome consitution. In 23 cases (49%), the error occurred during the first paternal meiotic division. Maternal origin of the additional chromosome was found in the remaining 24 cases (51%). Centromeric homo- versus heterozygosity could be determined in 18 out of the 24 maternally derived cases. According to the centromeric status and recombination rate, the nondisjunction was attributable in 9 cases (50%) to an error at the first maternal meiotic division, in 7 cases (39%) to an error at the second maternal meiotic division and in 2 cases (11%) to a nullo-chiasmata nondisjunction at meiosis II or to postzygotic mitotic error. No recombination, and in particular none in the pericentromeric region, was found in any of the 9 cases due to nondisjunction at the first maternal meiotic division. Significantly increased paternal age was found in the paternally derived cases. Maternal age was significantly higher in the maternally derived cases due to a meiotic I error compared with those due to a meiotic II error. There were no significant clinical differences between patients with respect to the origin of the additional X chromosome.  相似文献   

2.
The present report summarizes molecular studies on the parent and meiotic stage of origin of the additional chromosome in 432 fetuses or liveborns with an additional chromosome 13, 14, 15, 21, or 22. Our studies suggest that there is little variation in the origin of nondisjunction among the five acrocentric trisomies and that there is no association between the origin of nondisjunction and the likelihood of survival to term of the trisomic conceptus. The proportion of cases of paternal origin was similar among the five trisomies: 12% for trisomy 13, 17% for trisomy 14, 12% for trisomy 15, 9% for trisomy 21, and 11% for trisomy 22. The stage of nondisjunction was also similar among the five trisomies, with the majority of cases of maternal origin being due to nondisjunction at meiosis I, whereas for paternally derived cases, nondisjuction occurred primarily at meiosis II.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the parent and cell division of origin of the extra chromosome 18 in 62 aneuploids with a free trisomy 18 by using chromosome-18-specific pericentromeric short-sequence repeats. In 46 cases, DNA of patients was recovered from archival specimens, such as paraffin-embedded tissues and fixed chromosomal spreads. In 56 families, the supernumerary chromosome was maternal in origin; in six families, it was paternal. Among the 56 maternally derived aneuploids, we could exclude a postzygotic mitotic error in 52 cases. Among those in which the nondisjunction was attributable to an error at meiosis, 11 were the result of a meiosis I nondisjunction and 17 were caused by a meiosis II error. This result differs markedly from findings in acrocentric chromosomes where nondisjunction at maternal meiosis I predominates. Among the six paternally derived cases, two originated from a meiotic error, indicating that a nondisjunction in paternal meiosis is not as rare as previously suggested.Dedicated to Professor Dr. W. Gottschalk on the occasion of his 75th birthday  相似文献   

4.
Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) is one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities. Of cases of free trisomy 21 causing Down syndrome, about 95% result from nondisjunction during meiosis, and about 5% are due to mitotic errors in somatic cells. Previous studies using DNA polymorphisms of chromosome 21 showed that paternal origin of trisomy 21 occurred in only 6.7% of cases. However, these studies were conducted in liveborn trisomy 21-affected infants, and the possible impact of fetal death was not taken into account. Using nine distinct DNA polymorphisms, we tested 110 families with a prenatally diagnosed trisomy 21 fetus. Of the 102 informative cases, parental origin was maternal in 91 cases (89.2%) and paternal in 11 (10.8%). This percentage differs significantly from the 7.0% observed in previous studies (P<0.001). In order to test the influence of genomic parental imprinting, we determined the origin of the extra chromosome 21 in relation to different factors: advanced maternal age, maternal serum human chorionic gonadotropin (hormone of placental origin), severity of the disease, gestational age at diagnosis and fetal gender. We found that the increased frequency of paternal origin of nondisjunction in trisomy 21-affected fetuses cannot obviously be explained by factors leading to selective loss of paternal origin fetuses.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the mechanism of origin of 63 cases of trisomy 18. In 2 the additional chromosome was paternal in origin, and in the remaining 61 it was maternal in origin. Both paternal cases were attributable to a postzygotic mitotic (PZM) error. Among the 54 maternal cases for which the cell division of error was established, only 16 were attributable to an error at the first meiotic division (mat MI), whereas no fewer than 35 were due to an error at the second meiotic division (mat MII), the remaining 3 being the result of a PZM error involving the maternal chromosome 18. A standard map of chromosome 18 was constructed and compared with the nondisjunctional map. Approximately one-third of the mat MI errors were associated with complete absence of recombination, whereas in the remaining two-thirds and in all the mat MII errors recombination in the nondisjoined chromosomes appeared to be normal. All the maternal errors were associated with an increased maternal age, although this reached significance only for the mat MII category of nondisjunction. Our observations on chromosome 18 are compared with those on other chromosomes for which there are comparable data.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Of 61 families of children with trisomy 21, polymorphism of chromosome 21 elucidating the origin of the extra chromosome was found in 42. Nondisjunction was of paternal origin in 8 cases (19.04%) and the anomaly occurred with equal frequency during the first and second meiotic divisions. Maternal nondisjunction was demonstrated in 34 cases (80.95%), in which nondisjunction occurred by far the most often during the first meiotic division (29 cases).These results are in agreement with data from the literature, and suggest the existence of at least two different causes for chromosomal nondisjunction, the first being the same in both sexes and occurring in both meiotic divisions and the second specifically limited to the first meiotic division in the mother.Attachée de Recherche au CNRSAttachée de Recherche à l'INSERM  相似文献   

7.
We have used DNA polymorphisms to study meiotic crossovers of chromosome 21q in 27 nuclear families. Each family had a child with Down syndrome and a congenital heart defect. Twenty DNA polymorphisms on chromosome 21 were used to determine parental and meiotic origin of nondisjunction and to identify crossovers. Twenty-four cases were of maternal origin, and three were of paternal origin. Twenty-two unequivocal crossover events were identified. Sixteen crossovers were observed in 22 chromosome pairs nondisjoining at the second meiotic division. Fifty percent of crossover events in MI nondisjunction are detectable by molecular genetic means. Thus, the results suggest that, in this sample, each nondisjoined chromosome 21 pair has been involved in at least one crossover event.  相似文献   

8.
These are the first studies on the origin of nondisjunction of trisomy 21 in the USSR. Parental contribution was established in 84 of 140 families observed. In 66% cases the nondisjunction took place in oogenesis and in 34% cases - in spermatogenesis. Among the children, who inherited the additional chromosome from father, boys predominate. Compilative work on all the data available concerning the origin of the 21 nondisjunction has been performed; the factors favouring nondisjunction in I and II mitotic divisions in female meiosis, both genetical and age-dependent, have been considered. The great importance of the disturbances taking place in spermatogenesis for etiology is emphasized. It is proved that somatic hyperploidy does not serve as an indicator of predisposition for chromosome nondisjunction in meiosis.  相似文献   

9.
The parental origin of the extra chromosome 21 was determined with DNA polymorphisms in seven families in whom the proband and one of the parents carried an additional chromosome rearrangement (balanced translocation or pericentric inversion) not involving chromosome 21. The balanced rearrangement was inherited from the mother in two families and from the father in five families, whereas the additional chromosome 21 was derived from the mother in all seven families. These findings are not in agreement with the hypothesis of a paternal interchromosomal effect. The latter would imply that a balanced rearrangement in the father would favor nondisjunction during meiosis in the germ cells.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Two cases of 47,XXX males were studied, one of which has been published previously (Bigozzi et al. 1980). Analysis of X-linked restriction fragment length polymorphisms revealed that in this case, one X chromosome was of paternal and two were of maternal origin, whereas in the other case, two X chromosomes were of paternal and one of maternal origin. Southern blot analysis with Y-specific DNA probes demonstrated the presence of Y short arm sequences in both XXX males. In one case, the results obtained pointed to a paracentric inversion on Yp of the patient's father. In situ hybridization indicated that the Y-specific DNA sequences were localized on Xp22.3 in one of the three X chromosomes in both cases. The presence of Y DNA had no effect on random X inactivation. It is concluded that both XXX males originate from aberrant X-Y interchange during paternal meiosis, with coincident nondisjunction of the X chromosome during maternal meiosis in case 1, and during paternal meiosis II in case 2.  相似文献   

11.
Summary A family in which the proband showed phenotypic signs of both the Turner and Down syndromes was studied cytogenetically and with restriction fragment length polymorphisms. The proband's karyotype was 46,X,+21, showing double aneuploidy without any signs of mosaicism. The single X and one chromosome 21 were of paternal origin while two chromosomes 21 were of maternal origin. The nondisjunction of chromosome 21 took place in maternal meiosis II. If it is assumed that the absence of mosaicism renders postzygotic mitotic loss of the X chromosome unlikely, then the X chromosome would have been lost in maternal meiosis I or II. Recombination had occurred between the nondisjoined chromosomes 21. We conclude that double nondisjunction took place in one parent and that asynapsis was not a prerequisite for the autosomal nondisjunction.  相似文献   

12.
Mice bearing Robertsonian translocation chromosomes frequently produce aneuploid gametes. They are therefore excellent tools for studying nondisjunction in mammals. Genotypic analysis of embryos from a mouse cross between two different strains of mice carrying a (7, 18) Robertsonian chromosome enabled us to measure the rate of nondisjunction for chromosomes 7 and 18. Embryos (429) were harvested from 76 litters of mice and the parental origin of each chromosome 7 and 18 determined. Genotyping these embryos has allowed us to conclude the following: (1) there were 96 embryos in which at least one nondisjunction event had taken place; (2) the rate of maternal nondisjunction was greater than paternal nondisjunction for the chromosomes sampled in these mice; (3) a bias against chromosome 7 and 18 nullisomic gametes was observed, reflected in a smaller than expected number of uniparental disomic embryos; (4) nondisjunction events did not seem to occur at random throughout the 76 mouse litters, but were clustered into fewer than would be expected by chance; and (5) a deficiency of paternal chromosome 18 uniparental disomic embryos was observed along with a higher than normal rate of developmental retardation at 8.5 days post coitum, raising the possibility that this chromosome has at least one imprinted gene.  相似文献   

13.
Five polymorphic index markers were analyzed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to ascertain the parental origin of the extra X chromosomes in seven polysomic cases (one 49,XXXXX, three 49,XXXXY, two 48,XXXY, and one 48, XXYY). All four X chromosomes in 49, X polysomies were maternal in origin and the extra X chromosomes in 48 X polysomies were paternal. In each case the multiple X chromosomes were contributed by a single parent. Taken together with previously reported cases, these data support a single mechanism of sequential nondisjunction during either maternal or paternal gametogenesis as the cause of higher order sex chromosome polysomy.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Five live-born infants with Patau syndrome were studied for the nondisjunctional origin of the extra chromosome. Transmission modes of chromosomes 13 from parents to a child were determined using both QFQ- and RFA-heteromorphims as markers, and the origin was ascertained in all of the patients. The extra chromosome had originated in nondisjunction at the maternal first meiotic division in two patients, at the maternal second meiosis in other two, and at the paternal first meiosis in the remaining one.Summarizing the results of the present study, together with those of the previous studies on a liveborn and abortuses with trisomy 13, nondisjunction at the maternal and the paternal meiosis occurred in this trisomy in the ratio of 14:3. This ratio is not statistically different from that inferred from the previous studies for Down syndrome. These findings suggest that there may be a fundamental mechanism common to the occurrence of nondisjunction in the acrocentric trisomies.  相似文献   

15.
Thirty-two cases of uniparental disomy (UPD), ascertained from Prader-Willi syndrome patients (N = 27) and Angelman syndrome patients (N = 5), are used to investigate the pattern of recombination associated with nondisjunction of chromosome 15. In addition, the meiotic stage of nondisjunction is inferred by using markers mapping near the centromere. Two basic approaches to the analysis of recombination are utilized. Standard methods of centromere mapping are employed to determine the level of recombination in specific pairwise intervals along the chromosome. This method shows a significant reduction in recombination for two of five intervals examined. Second, the observed frequency of each recombinant class (i.e., zero, one, two, three, or more observable crossovers) is compared with expected values. This is useful for testing whether the reduction in recombination can be attributed solely to a proportion of cases with no recombination at all (because of asynapsis), with the remaining groups showing normal recombination (or even excess recombination), or whether recombination is uniformly reduced. Analysis of maternal UPD(15) data shows a slight reduction in the multiple-recombinant classes, with a corresponding increase in both the zero- and one-recombinant classes over expected values. The majority, more than 82%, of the extra chromosomes in maternal UPD(15) cases are due to meiotic I nondisjunction events. In contrast, most paternal UPD(15) cases so far examined appear to have a postzygotic origin of the extra paternal chromosome.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The origin of meiotic nondisjunction of the extra chromosomes X and 21 was studied in a patient with the karyotype 48,XXY,+21 using DNA polymorphisms. The extra chromosome X was the result of paternal first meiotic nondisjunction of X and Y. The extra chromosome 21 was derived from the mother. The meiotic error in the mother most probably occurred in meiosis II. Thus, this is a combination caused by the chance occurrence of two independent events.  相似文献   

17.
The concurrence of fragile X and Klinefelter syndromes would be expected occasionally. Therefore, the analysis of the literature showed that the concurrence of both conditions was found at least 16 times. Among them, only seven cases were analyzed for the parental origin of the extra chromosome X, suggesting that the maternal nondisjunction was preferentially inherited. We present the third patient with the concurrence of fragile X and Klinefelter syndromes, in which the parental origin of the supernumerary chromosome X was paternal. This finding reinforces that the parent-of-origin predisposition of the concurrence of the fragile X and Klinefelter syndromes is a pure coincidence.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Thirteen single-copy, chromosome-21-specific DNA probes were isolated from a recombinant library made from flow-sorted chromosome 21 DNA and regionally mapped using a panel of somatic cell hybrids. Five probes mapped in the 21q21-q22.1 region, six to the 21q22.1-qter region, and one to each of the regions 21q22.1-q22.2 and 21q22.3. Two of these probes, one of which maps in the critical region for Down syndrome, have recently been shown to be expressed at high levels in Down syndrome brain tissue (Stefani et al. 1988). Following preliminary screening for restriction fragment lenght polymorphisms (RFLPs), five polymorphisms were discovered with four of the chromosome 21 DNA probes. A frequent MspI polymorphism detected by one of the probes was used in conjunction with four previously described polymorphic chromosome 21 probes to analyse the origin of nondisjunction in 33 families with a child or fetus with trisomy 21. The parental origin of the additional chromosome 21 was determined in 12 cases: in 9 (75%) of these it was derived from the mother and in the other 3 cases (25%) it was of paternal origin. Cytogenetic analysis of Q-banding heteromorphisms was informative in three of five families tested, and in each case the RFLP results were confirmed. The meiotic stage of nondisjunction was defined with confidence in five families, the results being obtained with pericentromeric RFLP or cytogenetic markers. Recombination between two nondisjoined chromosomes was demonstrated in one family and is consistent with the view that a lack of recombination between chromosome 21 homologues or failure of their conjunction is not the invariable cause of trisomy 21.  相似文献   

19.
In order to get insight in the formation of isochromosomes we analysed different supernumerary euchromatic short arm isochromosomes for the parent and cell stage of origin. After cytogenetic detection and confirmation by fluorescence-in-situ hybridization we performed short tandem repeat typing in a child with i(9p), three with i(12p) and three with i(18p). The extra chromosomes were monocentric in each case, the i(9p) and i(12p) constitutions were found in mosaic with normal cell lines. Our results and those of other groups indicate a strong role of maternal meiosis in isochromosome formation: in one i(8p), 4 out of 5 i(9p), 7 out of 12 i(12p) and 18 out of 23 i(18p) families a maternal meiotic nondisjunction had occurred prior to the centromere misdivision. For chromosome 18, the majority of isochromosomes originated from a maternal meiosis II error (16/18). For the other tetrasomic constitutions the isochromosomes could be delineated from paternal as well as from maternal origin, the short tandem repeat typing patterns being consistent with meiotic or mitotic cell stages of formation. Thus, independently of the chromosomal origin, in the majority of cases with additional euchromatic isochromosomes maternal meiosis nondisjunction is the initial step followed by centromeric misdivision. Postzygotic nondisjunction as suggested previously due to mosaics observed in tetrasomies 9p and 12p seems to be of minor importance. The observed origin of isochromosomes 18 corresponds to that of trisomy 18, where the majority of cases can be delineated from maternal meiosis II errors.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether there was an increase of aneuploidy in the sperm from fathers of Turner syndrome patients of paternal origin who, in a previous study, showed an elevated incidence of XY meiotic nondisjunction. Sperm disomy frequencies for chromosomes 4, 13, 18, 21 and 22 were assessed by fluorescence in situ hybridisation in four of these individuals. As a group, the Turner syndrome fathers showed a general increase in disomy frequencies for chromosomes 13, 21 and 22, with a statistically significant increase in disomy frequencies for chromosomes 13 and 22 in one of the fathers and for chromosome 21 in two of them. Data from a previous work carried out by us in two fathers of Down syndrome patients of paternal origin also revealed increased sperm disomy frequencies for chromosomes 13, 21 and 22. Pooled as one group, these six fathers of aneuploid offspring of paternal origin had a statistically significant increase in the frequency of nondisjunction for these chromosomes with respect to control individuals. Our findings indicate that there may be an association between fathering aneuploid offspring and increased frequencies of aneuploid spermatozoa. Such increases do not seem to be restricted to the chromosome pair responsible for the aneuploid offspring. Acrocentric chromosomes and other chromosome pairs that usually show only one chiasma during meiosis seem to be more susceptible to malsegregation.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号