Title: chromosomal mutations
1chromosomal mutations
- Chromosomal mutations
- Changes in chromosome number
- Changes in chromosome structure
- Chromosome testing
- Karyotyping
- High resolution analysis
- Postnatal genetic testing
2I. Chromosomal Mutations
- possibly affecting more than one gene (multi-gene
level) - Changes in NUMBER
- Monoploid number (2n 1)
- Euploidy (multiples of n)
- Polyploid (3n, 4n, 5n)
- Triploid, tetraploid, pentaploid, hexaploid
31. Polyploidy
- Usually lethal in mammals
- Does occur in some animals - Reproduction via
parthenogenesis, Flatworms, leeches, brine
shrimp, lizards, salamanders, salmonids
Polyploidy in plants much more common because
it can be tolerated by plants, can reproduce
asexually Important role in the evolution of
plants wheat 2n 14, 28, 42 chrysanthemum
2n 18, 36, 54, 72, 90
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5sympatric speciation e.g. polyploidy in plants..
- Autopolyploidy due to meiosis error. Offspring
can self fertilize. - Allopolyploidy
- 2 different species mating, produce a hybrid that
is polyploid - The hybrid is fertile because the polyploid
condition provides the homologous chromosomes
for pairing during meiosis
6Endopolyploidy
- only certain cells in the organism are polyploid
- Liver cells, plant tissue (stem),
- larval gut tissue (mosquitos)
72. Aneuploidy the total is not an exact
multiple of a set(2n /- x)
- Caused by Nondisjunction failure of normal
chromatid division during meiosis, two
chromosomes go to one pole, none in the other. - Results in the wrong number of chromosomes.
- Results in a gene imbalance
8Fertilization of one of these affected gametes
produces a zygote w/ either 3 members (trisomy)
or only one member (monosomy) of the chromosome.
9gene imbalance - THE problem
- Aneuploids are more abnormal than polyploids,
why? (polyploid plants are completely viable and
usually bigger, whereas in Drosophila the only
aneuploids that survive are trisomics and
monosomics for chromosome 4, the smallest
chromosome) - Normal physiology of a cell depends on the proper
ratio of gene products in the euploid cell. - The amount of expression is correlated with the
number of genes in a cell - If 3 copies present 150 of the normal amount
of protein will be made - If 1 copy present 50 of the normal amount of
protein will be made
10Nondisjunction responsible for Turners syndrome
and Kleinfelters syndrome Turners syndrome
produces sterile females with a normal of
autosomes and 1 X chromosome (XO). These are the
only human monosomics that survive Klienfelters
syndrome individuals are trisomic XXY, they are
sterile males that are typically tall, and thin
and some degree of mental retardation. XYY
trisomic males have mild mental retardation
11Aneuploid Conditions in Humans
Inherited disorders associated with aneuploidy.
Trisomies and variations in the sex chromosomes
result in mental retardation, organ defects,
sexual immaturity, etc.
12Trisomy 21, abnormal creases
Trisomy 18, diaphragmatic hernia
Turners syndrome, developmental abnormality
polydactyly
13Why is monosomy so bad?
- Monosomics for all human autosomes die in utero
- Any deleterious recessive alleles present on
monosomic autosome will be automatically expressed
14B. Changes in chromosome structure
- A) Deletions
- B) Duplications
- C) Inversion
- D) Translocation
15Deletion loop
161. Deletions
- Spontaneous breakage and rejoining
- Interstitial deletion
- Terminal deletion
- Crossing over between repetitive DNA
Region w/centromere usually maintained during
division, the other part will be lost
17Multigenic deletions
- If both homologs have the same deletion then it
will be lethal - If only on one homolog, the deletion can
uncover lethal recessives in the heterozygous
condition - Psuedodominance when recessive alleles are
expressed due to a deletion event
18partial monosomy
Caused by a heterozygous deletion of the tip of
the p arm of chromosome 5 phenotype
distinctive cat-like cry made by infants,
microencephaly moon-like face
192. Duplications
- Extra copy of some particular region Rare, and
difficult to detect - Usually due to unequal crossing over during
meiosis, or through replication error prior to
meiosis - Not as problematic as deletions, but some
problems are associated - Bar eye in Drosophila (gene imbalance)
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213. Inversions
- Region breaks, rotates 180 degrees and rejoins
- Generally viable, and show no abnormalities at
the phenotypic level
Paired homologs form an During synapsis, one
chromosome must twist into a loop to pair up
w/the genes on the other
22Types of inversions
1) Paracentric centromere outside of the
inversion Cross over products dicentric and
acentric chromosome 2) Paricentric inversion
spans centromere Cross over products
duplication, and deletion
23During meiosis, homologs still pair up, even
w/inversions -Inversion loop makes this possible
24Crossing over produces affected
chromatids Duplication Deletion events
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264. Translocation-movement of chromosomal
fragments to a new location.
- Semisterility an organism that is heterozygous
for a reciprocal translocation usually produces
about half as many offspring as normal - due to difficulty in chromosome segregation in
meiosis. - Translocation cross because of the
translocations, the pairing of homologous regions
leads to the unusual structure that contains four
pairs of sister chromatids.
27- Nonreciprocal translocation (unbalanced)
- Centromeric regions of two nonhomologous
acrocentric chromosomes become fused to form
single centromere.
-Down Syndrome chromosome 21 14 rearrangement
leads to familial Down Syndrome. The
heterozygote is normal, the 3 chromosomes must
separate during meiosis (only 2/6 are normal, the
rest either monosomic or trisomic)
-Cancer (CML) type of leukemia, translocation
between chromosome 9 22, leads to the movement
of a gene where it will be overexpressed
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29Fragile sites susceptible to breakage
- Fragile X syndrome
- Most common form of inherited mental retardation
(1/4000 males, 1/8000 females) - FMR1 gene, has several trinucleotide repeats CGG
in the 5UTR region - Normal individuals 6 to 54 repeats
- Affected individuals gt230 repeats, region
becomes modified (bases are highly methylated
gene NOT expressed) - Link between fragile sites cancer
- Chromosome 3 FRA3B region, FHIT gene often
altered or missing in tumor cells taken from
individuals w/ cancer
30II. Chromosome Testing
- Chromosomes
- Karyotyping
- High resolution chromosome analysis
31A. karyotyping
- adding a dye to metaphasic chromosomes different
dyes that affect different areas of the
chromosomes are used for a range of
identification purposes. - Giemsa dye is effective because it markedly
stains the bands on a chromosome Each chromosome
can then be identified by its banding pattern - Amniocentesis
- Chorionic Villi Biopsy
32Prenatal genetic testing cont.
- Maternal Serum Amniotic fluid
- Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP)
- Unconjugated estriol (uE3)
- Dimeric inhibin A (DIA)
- Fetal cell sorting
33B. High resolution chromosome analysis
- SKY uses probes. Each of the individual probes
complementary to a unique region of one
chromosome - together, all of the probes make up
a collection of DNA that is complementary to all
of the chromosomes within the human genome. - Each probe is labeled with a fluorescent color
that is designated for a specific chromosome.. - the probes hybridize, the fluorescent probes
essentially paint the full set of chromosomes,
can be analyzed to determine whether any of them
exhibits translocations or other structural
abnormalities.
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352) In situ hybridization used to map specific
deletions insertions
No binding, 13.1-13.3 deleted
36(FISH) analysis of a normal individual (D) and
patient with a chromosome 22 deletion using a
probe for the UFD1 gene. The patient has only one
copy of UFD1 seen in blue (white arrows).
Chromosome 22 was labeled with a red fluorescent
marker (yellow arrows).
http//www.ggc.org/clinical.htm