Many surveys have been performed to find etiological relationships between pregnancy outcome and specific risk factors, such as exposure to chemicals and radiation or parental age. Advanced maternal age is a strong risk factor for trisomic pregnancies, albeit there are considerable variations among the different chromosomes. The definite incidence of the various structural and numerical chromosome aberrations in spontaneous abortions and liveborns is well known, as well as the rate of maternally and paternally derived rearrangements. Nevertheless studies have failed to assert an age-dependent risk for men fathering chromosomally abnormal children. New techniques using fluorescence in situ hybridization render it possible to analyze spermatozoa directly for numerical and, to some extent, for structural aberrations. This article compiles the findings of studies on human spermatozoa over the last few years.
Rat and mouse have become important animal models to study various human diseases such as cancer. Cytogenetic analysis of the respective karyotypes is frequently required to investigate the causative genetic defects and especially neoplastic cells often show complex chromosome aberrations and many different marker chromosomes. However, structural homogeneity of the chromosomes in these species as well as less pronounced differences in banding patterns make it difficult to assign genetic abnormalities to certain chromosomes by conventional banding techniques. Here we report for the first time the successful application of multicolor spectral karyotyping (SKY) to rat chromosomes, which allows unequivocal identification of all rat chromosomes with the exception of chromosomes 13 and 14 in different colors, thus enabling the elucidation of even complex rearrangements in the rat karyotype. Flow-sorted chromosome specific painting probes for all 22 rat chromosomes (20 autosomes, X, and Y) were combinatorially labeled by a set of five different fluorochromes and hybridized in situ to metaphase spreads of a healthy rat, to diakineses from testicular material, and to cells from a rat FAO hepatoma cell line. Measuring the complete spectrum at each image point by using the SpectraCube® spectral imaging system and respective computer software allowed identification of the individual rat chromosomes by their specific emission spectra. Classification algorithms in the analysis software can then display the rat chromosomes in specific pseudo-colors and automatically order them in a karyotype table. After its successful application to human and mouse chromosomes, spectral karyotyping of rat chromosomes now also allows cytogenetic screening of the complete rat genome by a single hybridization.
We describe a 3-year-old girl with severe delays in mental and motor skills, a history of generalized seizures, and subtle dysmorphic features. Conventional cytogenetics revealed a mosaic karyotype. A de novo ectopic NOR at the telomeric region of the short arm of one chromosome 8 (8ps) was found in 90% of lymphocyte and in 98% of fibroblast metaphases. A small NOR-bearing marker chromosome and a large derivative chromosome 8 without short arm satellites (der(8)) were present in the remaining cells. FISH with a probe specific for centromeres 14 and 22 labeled both the telomeric region of 8ps and the small marker centromere. Der(8) included an inverted duplication of 8p and a rearranged duplication of 8q but lacked a second centromere. A subtelomeric probe for 8p revealed a cryptic deletion in 8ps and der(8). Thus, the karyotype represents a combination of submicroscopic partial monosomy 8pter and mosaic trisomy 8.
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