Cytogenetics Notes Reviewer
Cytogenetics Notes Reviewer
Walther Flemming
An Austrian cytologist and professor of anatomy, who published the first
illustrations of human chromosomes in 1882.
Also referred to the stainable portion of the nucleus as chromatin and first used the
term mitosis
Waldeyer
Introduced the word chromosome, from the Greek words for “colored body”
Sutton and Boveri
Formally developed a “chromosome theory of inheritance”
Sutton
Combined the disciplines of cytology and genetics when he referred to the study of
chromosomes as cytogenetics.
Von Winiwarter
Concluded that men have 47 chromosomes and women have 48
Painter
Studied (meiotic) chromosomes derived from the testicles of several men who had
been incarcerated, castrated, and ultimately hanged in the Texas State Insane
Asylum.
Definitively reported the human diploid chromosome number to be 48 (double the
24 bivalents he saw), even though, 2 years earlier, he had preliminarily reported
that some of his better samples produced a diploid number of 46
Proposed the X and Y sex chromo- some mechanism in man.
Levitsky
Formulated the term karyotype to refer to the ordered arrangement of
chromosomes
Hsu
Reported that, rather than depending on histologic sections, examination of
chromosomes could be facilitated if one studied cells grown with tissue culture
techniques published by Fisher
Demonstrated the value of this method by using it to examine human embryonic cell
cultures, from which he produced both mitotic metaphase drawings and an
ideogram of all 48 human chromosomes
Hsu and Pomerat
Realizing the poten- tial of this fortuitous event, reported a “hypotonic shock”
procedure
Ford and Hamerton
Had modified this technique and had also worked out a method for pretreating cells
grown in culture with colchicine so as to destroy the mitotic spindle apparatus and
thus accumulate dividing cells in the metaphase
Joe Hin Tjio
An American-born Indonesian, learned about these proce- dures and worked with
Hamerton and Ford to further improve upon them.
Tjio and Levan
Cytogenetics Prelim Notes
Optimized the colchicine/hypotonic method for these cells, and in January 1956
(after care- fully reviewing images from decades of previously reported work), they
diplomatically reported that the human diploid chromosome number appeared to
be 46, not 48
Waardenburg
Made the suggestion that Down syndrome could perhaps be the result of a
chromosomal aberration
Lejeune
Studied the chromosomes of fibro- blast cultures from patients with Down
syndrome
Had proved Waardenburg’s hypothesis by reporting the first example of a
chromosomal syndrome in man
Lejeune and colleagues
Described an extra chromosome in each of these cells
Ford et al.
Reported that females with Turner syndrome have 45 chromosomes, apparently
with a single X chromosome and no Y
Jacobs and Strong
Demonstrated that men with Klinefelter syndrome have 47 chromosomes, with the
additional chromosome belonging to the group that contained the X chromosome
Jacobs
A female with sexual dysfunction was also shown to have 47 chromosomes and was
believed to have an XXX sex chromosome complement
Murray Barr
Was studying fatigue in repeatedly stimulated neural cells of the cat
Lyon
Developed the single active X chromosome mechanism of X-dosage compensation in
mammals
Lyon Hypothesis
Patau et al.
Described two similar infants with an extra “D group” chromosome who had
multiple anomalies quite different from those seen in Down syndrome
Trisomy 13
Edwards et al.
Described “A New Trisomic Syndrome” in an infant girl with yet another
constellation of phenotypic abnormalities and a different autosomal trisomy
Trisomy 18
Nowell and Hungerford
Reported the presence of the “Philadelphia chromosome” in chronic myelogenous
leukemia, demonstrating, for the first time, an association between chromo- somes
and cancer
Cytogenetics Prelim Notes
Lejeune et al.
Reported that three infants with the cri du chat (“cat cry”) syndrome of phenotypic
anomalies, which includes severe mental retardation and a characteristic kitten-like
mewing cry, had a deletion of the short arm of a B-group chromosome, designated
as chromosome 5.
Jacobs et al.
Described “aggressive behavior, mental subnormality and the XYY male”, and the
chromosomal instabilities associated with Bloom syndrome and Fanconi anemia
were reported
Nowell
Observed that the kidney bean extract phytohemagglutinin, used to separate red
and white blood cells, stimulated lymphocytes to divide
He introduced its use as a mitogen, permitting a peripheral blood sample to be used
for chromosome analysis.
Torbjorn Caspersson
Observed that when plant chromosomes were stained with fluorescent quinacrine
compounds, they did not fluoresce uniformly, but rather produced a series of bright
and dull areas across the length of each chromosome.
Caspersson and colleagues
Turned their attention from plants to the study of human chromosomes.
Hypothesized that the quinacrine derivative quinacrine mustard (QM) would
preferen- tially bind to guanine residues
Caspersson and co-workers
Had successfully produced and reported a unique “banding” pattern for each human
chromosome pair
Drets and Shaw
Described a method of pro- ducing similar chromosomal banding patterns using an
alkali and saline pretreatment followed by staining with Giemsa
Cytogenetics Terminologies
Cri du chat (“cat cry”) syndrome – phenotypic anomalies, which includes severe
mental retardation and a characteristic kitten-like mewing cry, had a deletion of the
short arm of a B-group chromosome, designated as chromosome 5.
Phytohemagglutinin – used to separate red and white blood cells, stimulated
lymphocytes to divide.
Giemsa – a compound developed for identification, in blood smears, of the
protozoan that causes malaria.
FISH – Fluorescence in situ hybridization
CENTRAL DOGMA OF CELL BIOLOGY. The following word or groups of words are all
associated with the central dogma of cell biology.
Write RP if closely associated with Replication
TC if closely associated with Transcription
TL if closely associated with Translation
Terms on Replication
Terminology Part II
Transcription – the synthesis of RNA from a DNA template
RNA polymerase I – the enzyme that synthesizes the ribosomal precursor RNA
RNA polymerase II – the enzyme that synthesizes mRNAs
Promoter – the DNA fragment where the RNA polymerase binds
Cytogenetics Prelim Notes
21. The ______________ of the DNA code is best explained by the ability of one mRNA codon
to represent two or more amino acids.
22. The nucleotide triplets found on the tRNA molecules are called ______________
23. The _______________ read mRNA transcript one codon at a time
24. The _______________ bond connects the amino acids in a protein molecule
25. The _______________ is made of a single continuous molecule of DNA complexed with
histone and nonhistone proteins
26. The octameric protein core in a nucleosome is made of pairs of histone proteins
H2A, H3, H4, and ____________
27. The 30-nm coil of 6 nucleosomes constitute the ____________
28. The site of protein synthesis is the ____________
29. Chromosomes are at their most condensed state during the mitotic _____________
30. The chromosomes are made up of sister chromatids, telomere, centromere, and
________________________.
Terminologies Part IV
(Parts of Chromosomes)
(Types of Chromatin)
(Cell Cycle)
Gap 0 Cells are not dividing during this stage; arrested stage
(Stage of Meiosis)
Telophase I The two haploid sets of chromosomes reach opposite poles and
the cytoplasm divides.
The result is two cells containing 23 chromosomes, each
composed of two chromatids.