Down syndrome (Trisomy 21)

1,741,960views

Down syndrome (Trisomy 21)

HMBP

HMBP

Glycolysis
Citric acid cycle
Electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation
Gluconeogenesis
Glycogen metabolism
Pentose phosphate pathway
Physiological changes during exercise
Amino acid metabolism
Nitrogen and urea cycle
Fatty acid synthesis
Fatty acid oxidation
Ketone body metabolism
Cholesterol metabolism
Essential fructosuria
Hereditary fructose intolerance
Galactosemia
Pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
Lactose intolerance
Glycogen storage disease type I
Glycogen storage disease type II (NORD)
Glycogen storage disease type III
Glycogen storage disease type IV
Glycogen storage disease type V
Leukodystrophy
Metachromatic leukodystrophy (NORD)
Krabbe disease
Gaucher disease (NORD)
Niemann-Pick disease types A and B (NORD)
Niemann-Pick disease type C
Fabry disease (NORD)
Tay-Sachs disease (NORD)
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 1 (Hurler syndrome) (NORD)
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 2 (Hunter syndrome) (NORD)
Cystinosis
Hartnup disease
Alkaptonuria
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
Phenylketonuria (NORD)
Cystinuria (NORD)
Homocystinuria
Maple syrup urine disease
Abetalipoproteinemia
Familial hypercholesterolemia
Hypertriglyceridemia
Hyperlipidemia
Disorders of carbohydrate metabolism: Pathology review
Disorders of fatty acid metabolism: Pathology review
Dyslipidemias: Pathology review
Glycogen storage disorders: Pathology review
Lysosomal storage disorders: Pathology review
Disorders of amino acid metabolism: Pathology review
Cellular structure and function
Cell membrane
Selective permeability of the cell membrane
Extracellular matrix
Cell-cell junctions
Endocytosis and exocytosis
Osmosis
Resting membrane potential
Nernst equation
Cytoskeleton and intracellular motility
Cell signaling pathways
Adrenoleukodystrophy (NORD)
Zellweger spectrum disorders (NORD)
Primary ciliary dyskinesia
Alport syndrome
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
Osteogenesis imperfecta
Marfan syndrome
Vitamin C deficiency
Peroxisomal disorders: Pathology review
Nuclear structure
DNA structure
Transcription of DNA
Translation of mRNA
Gene regulation
Epigenetics
Amino acids and protein folding
Protein structure and synthesis
Nucleotide metabolism
DNA replication
Lac operon
DNA damage and repair
Cell cycle
Mitosis and meiosis
DNA mutations
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
Orotic aciduria
Adenosine deaminase deficiency
Xeroderma pigmentosum
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
Bloom syndrome
Fanconi anemia
McCune-Albright syndrome
Acute radiation syndrome
Purine and pyrimidine synthesis and metabolism disorders: Pathology review
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR)
Gel electrophoresis and genetic testing
ELISA (Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay)
Karyotyping
DNA cloning
Fluorescence in situ hybridization
Mendelian genetics and punnett squares
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
Inheritance patterns
Independent assortment of genes and linkage
Evolution and natural selection
Down syndrome (Trisomy 21)
Edwards syndrome (Trisomy 18)
Patau syndrome (Trisomy 13)
Fragile X syndrome
Huntington disease
Myotonic dystrophy
Friedreich ataxia
Turner syndrome
Klinefelter syndrome
Prader-Willi syndrome
Angelman syndrome
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
Cri du chat syndrome
Williams syndrome
Alagille syndrome (NORD)
Achondroplasia
Polycystic kidney disease
Familial adenomatous polyposis
Hereditary spherocytosis
Multiple endocrine neoplasia
Neurofibromatosis
Tuberous sclerosis
von Hippel-Lindau disease
Albinism
Cystic fibrosis
Hemochromatosis
Sickle cell disease (NORD)
Alpha-thalassemia
Beta-thalassemia
Wilson disease
X-linked agammaglobulinemia
Hemophilia
Muscular dystrophy
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
Mitochondrial myopathy
Autosomal trisomies: Pathology review
Muscular dystrophies and mitochondrial myopathies: Pathology review
Miscellaneous genetic disorders: Pathology review

Transcript

Watch video only

Content Reviewers

Down syndrome or trisomy 21 is a genetic condition associated with a partial or complete copy of the 21st chromosome. Down syndrome is named after a British doctor John Langdon Down, who first described this condition as “mongolism” because the physical features of these individuals were similar to the physical characteristics of people from Blumenbach’s Mongolian race. Since the name was inaccurate and pejorative, in the 1970s, the name was changed to Down syndrome.

As you’re probably well-aware, our DNA is like this humongous blueprint of information on how to make a human. Usually this massive document is packaged up nicely into a storage bin called a chromosome. Actually, usually we have 46 chromosomes that we use to neatly organize all our information, depending on how you define organize. Each of the 46 chromosomes is actually part of a pair of chromosomes, since you get one from each parent, so 23 pairs.

If you wanted to make another human, first you’d have to find someone that feels the same way, and then you both contribute half of your chromosomes, so one from each pair, right? Fifty-fifty. Now, what if someone contributes one too many? Say Dad contributes 23 and Mom contributes 24, is that possible? Yes, and it’s the basis of one of the most common chromosomal disorders—Down Syndrome. Someone with Down syndrome has 47 chromosomes instead of 46, specifically they have an extra copy of chromosome 21, so instead of two, they have three, so Down Syndrome’s also known as trisomy 21, in other words, “three chromosome 21s”.

Alright, so in order to package up half the chromosomes into either a sperm cell or an egg cell, you actually start with a single cell that has 46 chromosomes, let’s just say we’re making an egg cell for the mother, I’m just going to show one pair of chromosomes, but remember that all 23 pairs do this. So the process of meiosis starts, which is what produces our sex cells, and the chromosomes replicate, and so now they’re sort of shaped like an ‘X’—even though there are two copies of DNA here, we still say it’s one chromosome since they’re hooked together in the middle by this thing called a centromere.

OK then the cell splits in two, and pulls apart the paired chromosomes, so in each of these cells you’ve now got 23 chromosomes. Now the two copies of the chromosome get pulled apart, and the cells split again, which means four cells, each still with 23 chromosomes. Now these are ready to pair up with a sperm cell from dad that has 23 chromosomes as well, totaling to 46 chromosomes, and voila–nine months down the road you’ve got yourself a baby.

Now a major risk factor for Down syndrome is maternal age, the age of the mother. Moreover, this condition occurs about once in about 1500 births where the mother is younger than 20 years old, contrasted to about one in 25 births where the mother’s older than 45 years old.

Now, there are three cytogenetic types of Down syndrome: free trisomy 21, Robertsonian translocation and finally, mosaicism. Free trisomy 21 occurs as a result of a process called nondisjunction and accounts for about 95% of cases. Non-disjunction means the chromosomes don’t split apart. If the chromosomes in this first step don’t split apart, then one cell ends up with both chromosomes and the other gets none. Then the final result is 2 cells with an extra chromosome, and two cells missing a chromosome.

Nondisjunction can also happen in the second step though, so first steps goes great, and both cells have a chromosome, but if they don’t split apart in the second step, then the final result is one cell with an extra chromosome, one cell missing chromosome, and two with the right number of chromosomes.

Now, if a sperm cell combines with any of these that have a duplicate of chromosome 21, then the combined cell will have one extra copy of chromosome 21, in other words, “three chromosome 21s”, or trisomy 21. In case you were wondering, the sperm could also combine with these cells that have the missing chromosome, if that’s the case then there would be a total of only one chromosome 21, and we would call it monosomy 21.

In my example, we followed the egg cell from the mother, but this process could happen the opposite way where the sperm starts out with too many or too few copies of chromosome 21.

Apart from nondisjunction, Robertsonian translocation accounts for about 4% of trisomy 21 cases. Translocation, in this case, is a fancy way of saying move from one place to another; so a part of one chromosome moves and switches places with a part from another chromosome. In this case, the long arm of chromosome 21 translocates over to chromosome 14, and you end up with two hybrids, one with both long arms and one with both short arms. This little guy with the short arms carries just a little bit of, usually nonessential genetic information, and is typically lost by the end of meiosis.

So there are a few ways this can go down, first, including the translocated chromosomes, they replicate, and now these could split into one with both normal chromosomes, and one with the long guy and short guy, in which case after splitting again you’d have two normal cells and two cells with a big guy, since we lost the little guy along the way. So now contribute the other parents DNA, and you’ve got a two normal cases, and then these two cases are called “balanced carriers”, and we say it’s balanced because you’ve got both long arms, and so most of the genes are still here, kind of like a two-for-one deal.

Ok now let’s say the normal chromosome 14 ends up with the short, and normal chromosome 21 with the long. Now you get two cells with the normal and long-arm, and two cells with the normal and short arm, which remember is usually lost. So these ones have one extra chromosome 21, since the long arms carry most of the genetic material for both chromosomes 14 and 21, and these ones are missing chromosomes.