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Bloom's syndrome. III. Analysis of the chromosome aberration characteristic of this disorder
Authors:James German  Luisella P Crippa  David Bloom
Institution:1. Department of Medical Genetics and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin
Abstract:The following hypothesis is put forward: X chromatin in man condenses around a center which is situated on Xq at a short distance from the centromere. The hypothesis is based on, and explains, two classes of observations. (1) Abnormal X chromosomes that have the assumed center in duplicate form bipartite Barr bodies in part of the cells. The frequency of bipartite bodies and the distance between the two parts seem to be determined by the distance between the postulated centers. (2) A large number of variously abnormal X chromosomes have been described. Almost all of them possess the postulated center and it seems possible that the very few apparent exceptions represent misidentifications of chromosome Xq — as isochromosome i(Xp). According to the hypothesis, chromosomes lacking the center would form no Barr body and therefore presumably would not be inactivated, thus leaving the cell severely unbalanced. Furthermore, absence of the center might interfere with the viability of the chromosome itself.
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