Estudo da origem do cromossomo 21 extra em portadores de Síndrome de Down.
Abstract
Down syndrome is usually due to meiotic nondisjunction leading to trisomy
21.The origin of nondisjunction in trisomy 21 has so far been studied using
cytogenetic heteromorphisms and DNA polymorphisms. Short sequence
repeats have recently been described as an abundant class of DNA
polymorphisms in the human genome, which can be typed using the
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) amplification. Analysis of these
polymorphisms may provide a more accurate understanding of the meiotic
stage of nondisjunction in trisomy 21 than that previously provided by
chromosomal heteromorphisms. The following DNA polymorphisms located
in pericentromeric region of human chromosome 21. Were typed D21S13E,
D21S16 and D21S120. The other polymorphism studied was HMG14-GT2
which map to the terminal band 21q22.3. In the present stud such markers
were used in order to the determine the parental origin and the meiotic stage
of the additional chromosome 21 in 32 cases of Down syndromy. Seven
families were informative showing that nondisjunction ocurred in meiosis I
and three were from maternal origin using HMG14-GT2 polymorphism. In
the other molecular systems the families are not informatives.