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Non-disjunction of chromosome 13

Non-disjunction of chromosome 13
Non-disjunction of chromosome 13
We performed a molecular study with 21 microsatellites on a sample of 82 trisomy 13 conceptuses, the largest number of cases studied to date. The parental origin was determined in every case and in 89% the extra chromosome 13 was of maternal origin with an almost equal number of maternal MI and MII errors. The latter finding is unique among human autosomal trisomies, where maternal MI (trisomies 15, 16, 21, 22) or MII (trisomy 18) errors dominate. Of the nine paternally derived cases five were of MII origin but none arose from MI errors. There was some evidence for elevated maternal age in cases with maternal meiotic origin for liveborn infants. Maternal and paternal ages were elevated in cases with paternal meiotic origin. This is in contrast to results from a similar study of non-disjunction of trisomy 21 where paternal but not maternal age was elevated. We find clear evidence for reduced recombination in both maternal MI and MII errors and the former is associated with a significant number of tetrads (33%) that are nullichiasmate, which do not appear to be a feature of normal chromosome 13 meiosis. This study supports the evidence for subtle chromosome-specific influences on the mechanisms that determine non-disjunction of human chromosomes, consistent with the diversity of findings for other trisomies.
research, genome, human, infant, meiosis, research support, trisomy, female, comparative study, adult, chromosome mapping, chromosomes, maternal age, microsatellite repeats, humans, genetic, male, nondisjunction, pair 13
2004-2010
Bugge, Merete
25add05f-b871-4188-9ed3-031da26c399d
Collins, Andrew
7daa83eb-0b21-43b2-af1a-e38fb36e2a64
Hertz, Jens Michael
29ea29f2-e1f4-4ac8-acc7-386f46f4eccc
Eiberg, Hans
f18addd7-20bf-4251-be1b-cef58ee55715
Lundsteen, Claes
60e7cb52-124a-4eb8-aa63-a28a0c92f434
Brandt, Carsten A.
1651b03c-c476-436b-acbd-9d19de6cea45
Bak, Mads
a66c4752-703b-4110-b4dc-a11d42f048db
Hansen, Claus
a9423853-4f6d-44e9-9946-a477201d3b8e
deLozier, Celia D.
e06f359d-a93b-4d63-ad30-415a5f2c7806
Lespinasse, James
4839378e-d050-4ceb-b419-4afe993a1140
Tranebjaerg, Lisbeth
e460dc5f-cf36-4367-92de-104f1427aeb0
Hahnemann, Johanne M.D.
62ac6788-908f-410b-a825-96cc9c91abc1
Rasmussen, Kirsten
ca317d13-db0e-4505-8e8a-c486287469a2
Bruun-Petersen, Gert
eee2b04c-ff51-47c0-b87a-d6ac7db7d313
Duprez, Laurence
ebd66a8d-5223-4a58-9981-45b39760e4b3
Tommerup, Niels
cf684508-e783-4a54-8ef6-0f75bb94350c
Petersen, Michael B.
3718d4f3-a4dc-460c-86df-0107a1bdc294
Bugge, Merete
25add05f-b871-4188-9ed3-031da26c399d
Collins, Andrew
7daa83eb-0b21-43b2-af1a-e38fb36e2a64
Hertz, Jens Michael
29ea29f2-e1f4-4ac8-acc7-386f46f4eccc
Eiberg, Hans
f18addd7-20bf-4251-be1b-cef58ee55715
Lundsteen, Claes
60e7cb52-124a-4eb8-aa63-a28a0c92f434
Brandt, Carsten A.
1651b03c-c476-436b-acbd-9d19de6cea45
Bak, Mads
a66c4752-703b-4110-b4dc-a11d42f048db
Hansen, Claus
a9423853-4f6d-44e9-9946-a477201d3b8e
deLozier, Celia D.
e06f359d-a93b-4d63-ad30-415a5f2c7806
Lespinasse, James
4839378e-d050-4ceb-b419-4afe993a1140
Tranebjaerg, Lisbeth
e460dc5f-cf36-4367-92de-104f1427aeb0
Hahnemann, Johanne M.D.
62ac6788-908f-410b-a825-96cc9c91abc1
Rasmussen, Kirsten
ca317d13-db0e-4505-8e8a-c486287469a2
Bruun-Petersen, Gert
eee2b04c-ff51-47c0-b87a-d6ac7db7d313
Duprez, Laurence
ebd66a8d-5223-4a58-9981-45b39760e4b3
Tommerup, Niels
cf684508-e783-4a54-8ef6-0f75bb94350c
Petersen, Michael B.
3718d4f3-a4dc-460c-86df-0107a1bdc294

Bugge, Merete, Collins, Andrew, Hertz, Jens Michael, Eiberg, Hans, Lundsteen, Claes, Brandt, Carsten A., Bak, Mads, Hansen, Claus, deLozier, Celia D., Lespinasse, James, Tranebjaerg, Lisbeth, Hahnemann, Johanne M.D., Rasmussen, Kirsten, Bruun-Petersen, Gert, Duprez, Laurence, Tommerup, Niels and Petersen, Michael B. (2007) Non-disjunction of chromosome 13. Human Molecular Genetics, 16 (16), 2004-2010. (doi:10.1093/hmg/ddm148).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We performed a molecular study with 21 microsatellites on a sample of 82 trisomy 13 conceptuses, the largest number of cases studied to date. The parental origin was determined in every case and in 89% the extra chromosome 13 was of maternal origin with an almost equal number of maternal MI and MII errors. The latter finding is unique among human autosomal trisomies, where maternal MI (trisomies 15, 16, 21, 22) or MII (trisomy 18) errors dominate. Of the nine paternally derived cases five were of MII origin but none arose from MI errors. There was some evidence for elevated maternal age in cases with maternal meiotic origin for liveborn infants. Maternal and paternal ages were elevated in cases with paternal meiotic origin. This is in contrast to results from a similar study of non-disjunction of trisomy 21 where paternal but not maternal age was elevated. We find clear evidence for reduced recombination in both maternal MI and MII errors and the former is associated with a significant number of tetrads (33%) that are nullichiasmate, which do not appear to be a feature of normal chromosome 13 meiosis. This study supports the evidence for subtle chromosome-specific influences on the mechanisms that determine non-disjunction of human chromosomes, consistent with the diversity of findings for other trisomies.

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More information

Published date: 15 August 2007
Keywords: research, genome, human, infant, meiosis, research support, trisomy, female, comparative study, adult, chromosome mapping, chromosomes, maternal age, microsatellite repeats, humans, genetic, male, nondisjunction, pair 13

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 59532
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/59532
PURE UUID: 55d0bc91-b5aa-4461-a8db-a9ef93acfc40
ORCID for Andrew Collins: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7108-0771

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:42

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Contributors

Author: Merete Bugge
Author: Andrew Collins ORCID iD
Author: Jens Michael Hertz
Author: Hans Eiberg
Author: Claes Lundsteen
Author: Carsten A. Brandt
Author: Mads Bak
Author: Claus Hansen
Author: Celia D. deLozier
Author: James Lespinasse
Author: Lisbeth Tranebjaerg
Author: Johanne M.D. Hahnemann
Author: Kirsten Rasmussen
Author: Gert Bruun-Petersen
Author: Laurence Duprez
Author: Niels Tommerup
Author: Michael B. Petersen

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