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Chapter 8 Human Karyotypes and Chromosome Behavior Jones and Bartlett Publishers © 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8 Human Karyotypes and Chromosome Behavior Jones and Bartlett Publishers © 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8 Human Karyotypes and Chromosome Behavior Jones and Bartlett Publishers © 2005

2 Chromosome stability The normal chromosome complement of mitotic cells of an organism can be photographed in metaphase. Actual cut-outs or digital images can be arranged to pair homologous chromosomes. In humans, chromosome 1 is the longest.

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4 Human karyotype

5 Human karyotypes: terms

6 The banding patterns of human chromosomes The short arm of a chromosome is called “p” (for ‘petite’) and the long arm “q”. A, B, C, etc. refer to grouping of chromosomes by size.

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8 The 3 shapes of chromosomes based on the location of the centromere

9 Acentric chromosomes lack a centromere. Dicentric chromosomes have two centromeres. –These form a bridge during cell division, or the chromosome can break. Chromosome 2 in humans.

10 The proposed mechanism for the creation of the long human chromosome 2 by fusion of two shorter chromosomes

11 Similarity between chromosomes of the great apes

12 In human females, one of the 2 X-chromosomes is inactivated early in development Dosage compensation: In Drosophila males, the X chromosome has its transcription increased. C. elegans females decrease transcription of both X chromosomes. In mammals, one X is inactivated (Barr body). Calico cat example.

13 X-inactivation  Barr bodies

14 Calico Cat Female cats heterozygous for orange and black hair color develop patches with either X inactivated. (The white area is another gene, S for white spotting and is autosomal.)

15 Pseudoautosomal inheritance At the tips of both arms of the X chromosome are several megabases that are not inactivated. These have homologous regions in the Y chromosome, so crossing over can occur. These pseudoautosomal regions (PARp and PARq) have a 20-fold higher recombination rate than in true autosomal chromosomes.

16 Proposed steps in the creation of the modern Y-chromosome by rearrangement of segments in an ancient Y-chromosome

17 Distribution of Y-chromosome haplotypes, presumed to have descended from Genghis Khan Haplotype: the allelic form of each of a set of linked genes present in a single chromosome.

18 Human chromosomal anomalies and spontaneous abortion

19 The probability of a child with Down syndrome increases with Mother’s age

20 Pairing and segregation of 3 homologous chromosomes in meiosis I This kind of chromosome pairing occurs in trisomics (2n+1) or triploids (3n)

21 Nondisjunction

22 Environmental risks for aneuploidy in humans Suggested risks: radiation, smoking, alcohol consumption, oral contraceptives, fertility drugs, pollutants, pesticides, etc. Maternal-age effects on meiosis – maybe estrogen has a role. Bisphenol A is an estrogen mimic found in polycarbonate plastics. In mice, aneuploid oocytes increased from 1.4% to 11.6%


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