Maternal folate polymorphisms and the etiology of human nondisjunction
Maternal folate polymorphisms and the etiology of human nondisjunction
Attempts to identify genetic contributors to human meiotic nondisjunction have met with little, if any, success. Thus, recent reports linking Down syndrome to maternal polymorphisms at either of two folate metabolism enzymes, methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) and methionine synthase reductase (MTRR), have generated considerable interest. In the present report, we asked whether variation at MTHFR (677C?T) or MTRR (66A?G) might be associated with human trisomies other than trisomy 21. We analyzed maternal polymorphisms at MTHFR and MTRR in 93 cases of sex-chromosome trisomy, 44 cases of trisomy 18, and 158 cases of autosomal trisomies 2, 7, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, or 22, and compared the distributions of genotypes to those of control populations. We observed a significant increase in the MTHFR polymorphism in mothers of trisomy 18 conceptuses but were unable to identify any other significant associations. Overall, our observations suggest that, at least for the sex chromosomes and for a combined set of autosomal trisomies, polymorphisms in the folate pathway are not a significant contributor to human meiotic nondisjunction.
434-439
Hassold, Terry J.
93117e5b-0687-4fd2-9816-97c2972824a0
Burrage, Lindsay C.
8d9575cc-47c1-4bdf-aaca-5404c268169c
Chan, Ernest R.
97b53048-0af2-460a-a454-25978a4c1682
Judis, LuAnn M.
3bbbbfab-20fa-481a-85dc-14850ae185cb
Schwartz, Stuart
712901f4-24b4-4a5a-a81c-f5007b4a1942
James, S. Jill
de9786b0-10a5-433c-9662-9da3a0b97854
Jacobs, Patricia A.
d87ec15b-13c3-4868-96f1-b4b99030fa5b
Thomas, N. Simon
1a601957-288d-4f12-a9f7-4f4279b7f9b3
August 2001
Hassold, Terry J.
93117e5b-0687-4fd2-9816-97c2972824a0
Burrage, Lindsay C.
8d9575cc-47c1-4bdf-aaca-5404c268169c
Chan, Ernest R.
97b53048-0af2-460a-a454-25978a4c1682
Judis, LuAnn M.
3bbbbfab-20fa-481a-85dc-14850ae185cb
Schwartz, Stuart
712901f4-24b4-4a5a-a81c-f5007b4a1942
James, S. Jill
de9786b0-10a5-433c-9662-9da3a0b97854
Jacobs, Patricia A.
d87ec15b-13c3-4868-96f1-b4b99030fa5b
Thomas, N. Simon
1a601957-288d-4f12-a9f7-4f4279b7f9b3
Hassold, Terry J., Burrage, Lindsay C., Chan, Ernest R., Judis, LuAnn M., Schwartz, Stuart, James, S. Jill, Jacobs, Patricia A. and Thomas, N. Simon
(2001)
Maternal folate polymorphisms and the etiology of human nondisjunction.
American Journal of Human Genetics, 69 (2), .
(doi:10.1086/321971).
Abstract
Attempts to identify genetic contributors to human meiotic nondisjunction have met with little, if any, success. Thus, recent reports linking Down syndrome to maternal polymorphisms at either of two folate metabolism enzymes, methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) and methionine synthase reductase (MTRR), have generated considerable interest. In the present report, we asked whether variation at MTHFR (677C?T) or MTRR (66A?G) might be associated with human trisomies other than trisomy 21. We analyzed maternal polymorphisms at MTHFR and MTRR in 93 cases of sex-chromosome trisomy, 44 cases of trisomy 18, and 158 cases of autosomal trisomies 2, 7, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, or 22, and compared the distributions of genotypes to those of control populations. We observed a significant increase in the MTHFR polymorphism in mothers of trisomy 18 conceptuses but were unable to identify any other significant associations. Overall, our observations suggest that, at least for the sex chromosomes and for a combined set of autosomal trisomies, polymorphisms in the folate pathway are not a significant contributor to human meiotic nondisjunction.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: August 2001
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 24742
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/24742
ISSN: 0002-9297
PURE UUID: db6bb78d-a0c8-4271-a9fc-6fb8ce707dc9
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 03 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:58
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Terry J. Hassold
Author:
Lindsay C. Burrage
Author:
Ernest R. Chan
Author:
LuAnn M. Judis
Author:
Stuart Schwartz
Author:
S. Jill James
Author:
Patricia A. Jacobs
Author:
N. Simon Thomas
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics