Variation in pattern and frequency of acrocentric association in normal and trisomy-21 individuals
โ Scribed by Moh-Ying Yip; Donald P. Fox
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 808 KB
- Volume
- 59
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-6717
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โฆ Synopsis
Chromosomally normal and trisomy-21 individuals were studied for the ability of their nucleolus-organising chromosomes to form satellite associations in G-banded lymphocyte metaphases. Two types of parameter, absolute association frequency and relative association frequency, were used. There was no significant difference between females and males or between Caucasoids and Mongoloids for either type of association parameter in the controls, nor was there significant correlation between age (17-40 years) and either type of parameter in the controls. The pattern of two chromosome associations is accounted for by two related models in both normal and trisomic individuals. These models imply that there is an extensive polymorphism for associating ability and that this ability may be zero in individual chromosomes. Homologous do not associate preferentially with each other. The absolute frequency of acrocentric association is lower in trisomy 21 individuals than disomic controls, but the relative involvement of chromosome 21 (after correction for the trisomic state) is higher than in the controls.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This study involving 109 normal subjects shows that the mean number of associations by cell seems to represent a biological constant which is not sex related and increases with age, especially after 33 years. From a qualitative point of view, the associations are not at random and their distribution
In the present study, we analyzed the development of the axial skeleton in human trisomy 21 fetuses and defined the fields in the axial skeleton affected in this form of aneuploidy. We investigated 31 human fetuses with trisomy 21, gestational ages 12-24 weeks, on the basis of radiographs of midsagi
The pattern of acrocentric chromosomes was studied in 190 normal and 190 trisomic cells from a patient with trisomy 21 mosaicism. No significant differences were observed in the total numbers of associations, the numbers of mitoses with one, two, or three associations, or the numbers of associations