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7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Humans usually have 46 chromosomes per cell, including 22 pairs of autosomes (44 autosomes total) and one pair of sex chromosomes: Female Male Human chromosomal abnormalities may be numerical or structural. Numerical Total # chromosomes / cell Trisomy = Monosomy = Triploidy = Tetraploidy = Structural 1 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Chromosomal abnormalities manifest themselves in two ways: 1) Spontaneous abortions of human pregnancies --> nearly all during first trimester of pregnancy, with many during the first month, when pregnancy is recognized only by hormonal assays of spontaneously aborted embryos and fetuses have Therefore 2 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Breakdown of chromosomal abnormalities in spontaneous abortions: Trisomy XXX, XXY, XYY All others Monosomy X (45,X or XO) Triploidy Tetraploidy Other Total 100% 3 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Chromosomal abnormalities manifest themselves in two ways: 2) Defects in newborns: Among the most common: XXY XYY XO XXX Trisomy 13 Trisomy 18 Trisomy 21 Structural anomalies 4 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Let's now focus on Trisomy 21, also known as Down Syndrome: phenotype: short stature, mental retardation, characteristic facial features, congenital heart defects (in 40% of affected individuals), increased risk of leukemia (cancer of white blood cells), increased risk of cataracts (clouding of lens of eye), premature aging. For more information on all aspects of Down syndrome, see a fantastic web site maintained by a pediatrician with a son with Down Syndrome: www.ds-health.com Trisomy 21 Down Syndrome Numerical chromosomal disorders are the result of nondisjunction = Nondisjunction can occur during or How could you figure out whether nondisjunction for chromosome 21 had occurred during 5 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Consider the following results with two chromosome 21 SSRs in a child with Down syndrome and his parents: SSR 21.1 SSR 21.2 A B C D A’ B’ C’ D’ What can you conclude? At least two things: 1. The presence in the affected child of two different maternal alleles for SSR 21.1 indicates that 2. There has been 6 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 But at exactly which stage of meiosis did nondisjunction occur? Let's draw out meiosis as it normally occurs, illustrating just two of the 23 pairs of chromosomes in a human cell, and exaggerating the size of the centromeres: Human Male Meiosis Meiosis I: Meiosis II: In men, each meiosis yields 4 gametes, or sperm. 7 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 In women, however, only one gamete is produced from each meiosis. The other three haploid equivalents are discarded in structures called the first and second polar bodies. Human Female Meiosis In human females: •Meiosis I begins (prophase is entered) during embryogenesis and is not completed in any particular egg until that egg is ovulated, sometime after puberty. •Meiosis II does not occur until fertilization. 8 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Now we'll focus on chromosome 21 alone, add the genetic markers SSR21.1 and SSR21.2, and figure out the details in this case of nondisjunction leading to trisomy 21. First we'll diagram how chromosome 21 would normally segregate at meiosis: Normal chromosome 21 segregation: 46 92 Meiosis I 46 46 Meiosis II 23 23 23 23 Recognize that, in female meiosis, only one of the 4 possible gametes will be formed. The other three haploids will be found in 1st and 2nd polar bodies, but assignment to gamete or polar bodies appears to be a random matter, so all 4 possible gametes are diagrammed above. Diagrams below will return to convention of showing 1st and 2nd polar bodies. 9 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Nondisjunction in female meiosis I leading to trisomy: A B 46 A A’ A A’ A’ B’ B B’ B B’ 92 10 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Nondisjunction in female meiosis II leading to trisomy: A B A A’ A A’ A’ B’ 46 B B’ B B’ 92 Meiosis I A A’ 46 46 A 1st polar body B’ Meiosis II B A’ B B’ 11 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 The key to distinguishing Meiosis I vs Meiosis II nondisjunction is the centromere-linked marker, which will segregate as follows: Proper disjunction Meiosis I nondisjunction Meiosis II nondisjunction 12 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 We'll now reexamine our data: SSR 21.1 SSR 21.2 Interpretation: A B C D A’ B’ C’ D’ The data for SSR21.1, the centromeric marker, demonstrate that nondisjunction occurred in Taken together, the SSR21.1 and SSR21.2 data demonstrate that 13 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 Studies of many individuals with trisomy 21 using centromere-linked markers have revealed following breakdown of cases: Nondisjunction in maternal meiosis: Meiosis I: Meiosis II: Nondisjunction in paternal meiosis: 14 7.03 Lectures 33-34 12/05/01, 12/07/01 The risk of trisomy 21 rises dramatically with increasing maternal age: Age of Mother Incidence of trisomy 21 20 30 35 40 45 50 Trisomy 21 provides the major rationale for advising pregnant women 35 years of age or older to undergo amniocentesis (examination of fetus' chromosomes by light microscopy). In human females, oocytes enter but arrest in prophase of Each oocyte remains arrested in prophase of meiosis I until that individual oocyte is ovulated, as much as 50 years later! Geneticists speculate but are uncertain whether the lengthy arrest in meiosis I contributes to the increasing risk of nondisjunction as women age. That trisomy 21 causes a marked phenotype suggests that having 3 rather than 2 copies of certain genes can be harmful. Gene dosage matters! In 2000, an international team of scientists reported the complete sequence of chromosome 21. Based on electronic analysis of the sequence, they estimated that the chromosome contains only about 225 genes. Which of these genes (and how many of these genes?) are responsible for the Down syndrome phenotype? We do not know the answers to these questions, which are the focus of intense research efforts today. 15