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Karyotypes

Karyotypes. What are they?? How do we use them?. Karyotypes – What are they?. A karyotype is a photo of the chromosomes in a cell that shows the chromosomes arranged by size. Karyotypes – What are they?. A normal human karyotype should have 46 chromosomes.

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Karyotypes

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  1. Karyotypes What are they?? How do we use them?

  2. Karyotypes – What are they? • A karyotype is a photo of the chromosomes in a cell that shows the chromosomes arranged by size.

  3. Karyotypes – What are they? • A normal human karyotype should have 46 chromosomes. • 23 pairs of homologous chromosomes • The last pair (pair 23) determines if the human is male or female • Also known as the sex chromosomes

  4. Normal Karyotype--male • A normal male karyotype has 1 X chromosome and 1 Y chromosome in the 23rd pair • Male = XY

  5. Normal Karyotype--female • A normal female karyotype has 2 X chromosomes in the 23rd pair • female = XX

  6. Is this person female or male?

  7. Karyotypes – How do we use them? • Karyotypes can reveal genetic disorders by showing changes in chromosome number or large deletions in chromosomes

  8. How are DNA samples obtained for karyotypes?

  9. If there are chromosomal number abnormalities, how do they form? • If there is a mistake when chromosomes are separating during meiosis, then the resulting sperm or egg will have too many or too few chromosomes. • This is called Nondisjunction

  10. Nondisjunction

  11. So, what do you look for when examining a karyotype? • Are there 46 chromosomes? • Are there 2 identical pairs of each chromosome and 2 sex chromosomes? • Are there any rearrangements between chromosomes or large deletions?

  12. Trisomy 21 or Down Syndrome • Caused by nondisjunction • The #21 chromosomes ends up with 3 chromosomes instead of 2 • Humans with Trisomy 21 have 47 chromosomes total

  13. Correlation between mother’s age and Trisomy 21 incidence

  14. Turners syndrome • Caused by nondisjunction • There is only 1 X chromosome and no Y chromosome • Humans with Turners syndrome have 45 chromosomes total

  15. Klinefelter syndrome • Caused by nondisjunction • There are 2 X chromosomes and 1 Y chromosome • Humans with Klinefelter syndrome have 47 chromosomes total

  16. Male or Female? Is this a normal karyotype?? XXY Male (Extra X)

  17. What we can’t see • Individual DNA strands or genes • The number of genes in any given area of a chromosome. • The presence or location of small mutations. (Scientists cannot predict diseases caused by small mutations within genes.

  18. Other chromosomal disorders that can arise?

  19. Problems with chromosomes • Duplication: copied parts of chromosome A B C D A B B B C D

  20. Problems with chromosomes • Deletion: missing parts of chromosome A B C D A D

  21. Deletion—18 Q Deletion Syndrome • Caused by deletion • Parts of the #18 chromosomes have been deleted

  22. Problems with chromosomes • Inversion: parts of chromosome flipped A B C D A C B D

  23. Chromosomal mutations Deletion Duplication Inversion Translocation

  24. Human genetic disorders • Sometimes the alleles inherited contribute to disorders, or diseases, and not from the number or shape of the chromosomes. • Types include: • Sex-linked: genes found on X or Y chromosome • Recessive: requires 2 allele copies to express disorder • Dominant: requires only 1 allele copy to express disorder

  25. Recessive disorders

  26. Dominant disorder

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