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Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain

BACKGROUND: Understanding the mechanisms underlying generation of neuronal variability and complexity remains the central challenge for neuroscience. Structural variation in the neuronal genome is likely to be one important mechanism for neuronal diversity and brain diseases. Large-scale genomic var...

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Autores principales: Yurov, Yuri B., Iourov, Ivan Y., Vorsanova, Svetlana G., Liehr, Thomas, Kolotii, Alexei D., Kutsev, Sergei I., Pellestor, Franck, Beresheva, Alfia K., Demidova, Irina A., Kravets, Viktor S., Monakhov, Viktor V., Soloviev, Ilia V.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1891435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17593959
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000558
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author Yurov, Yuri B.
Iourov, Ivan Y.
Vorsanova, Svetlana G.
Liehr, Thomas
Kolotii, Alexei D.
Kutsev, Sergei I.
Pellestor, Franck
Beresheva, Alfia K.
Demidova, Irina A.
Kravets, Viktor S.
Monakhov, Viktor V.
Soloviev, Ilia V.
author_facet Yurov, Yuri B.
Iourov, Ivan Y.
Vorsanova, Svetlana G.
Liehr, Thomas
Kolotii, Alexei D.
Kutsev, Sergei I.
Pellestor, Franck
Beresheva, Alfia K.
Demidova, Irina A.
Kravets, Viktor S.
Monakhov, Viktor V.
Soloviev, Ilia V.
author_sort Yurov, Yuri B.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Understanding the mechanisms underlying generation of neuronal variability and complexity remains the central challenge for neuroscience. Structural variation in the neuronal genome is likely to be one important mechanism for neuronal diversity and brain diseases. Large-scale genomic variations due to loss or gain of whole chromosomes (aneuploidy) have been described in cells of the normal and diseased human brain, which are generated from neural stem cells during intrauterine period of life. However, the incidence of aneuploidy in the developing human brain and its impact on the brain development and function are obscure. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To address genomic variation during development we surveyed aneuploidy/polyploidy in the human fetal tissues by advanced molecular-cytogenetic techniques at the single-cell level. Here we show that the human developing brain has mosaic nature, being composed of euploid and aneuploid neural cells. Studying over 600,000 neural cells, we have determined the average aneuploidy frequency as 1.25–1.45% per chromosome, with the overall percentage of aneuploidy tending to approach 30–35%. Furthermore, we found that mosaic aneuploidy can be exclusively confined to the brain. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data indicates aneuploidization to be an additional pathological mechanism for neuronal genome diversification. These findings highlight the involvement of aneuploidy in the human brain development and suggest an unexpected link between developmental chromosomal instability, intercellural/intertissular genome diversity and human brain diseases.
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spelling pubmed-18914352007-06-27 Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain Yurov, Yuri B. Iourov, Ivan Y. Vorsanova, Svetlana G. Liehr, Thomas Kolotii, Alexei D. Kutsev, Sergei I. Pellestor, Franck Beresheva, Alfia K. Demidova, Irina A. Kravets, Viktor S. Monakhov, Viktor V. Soloviev, Ilia V. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Understanding the mechanisms underlying generation of neuronal variability and complexity remains the central challenge for neuroscience. Structural variation in the neuronal genome is likely to be one important mechanism for neuronal diversity and brain diseases. Large-scale genomic variations due to loss or gain of whole chromosomes (aneuploidy) have been described in cells of the normal and diseased human brain, which are generated from neural stem cells during intrauterine period of life. However, the incidence of aneuploidy in the developing human brain and its impact on the brain development and function are obscure. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To address genomic variation during development we surveyed aneuploidy/polyploidy in the human fetal tissues by advanced molecular-cytogenetic techniques at the single-cell level. Here we show that the human developing brain has mosaic nature, being composed of euploid and aneuploid neural cells. Studying over 600,000 neural cells, we have determined the average aneuploidy frequency as 1.25–1.45% per chromosome, with the overall percentage of aneuploidy tending to approach 30–35%. Furthermore, we found that mosaic aneuploidy can be exclusively confined to the brain. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data indicates aneuploidization to be an additional pathological mechanism for neuronal genome diversification. These findings highlight the involvement of aneuploidy in the human brain development and suggest an unexpected link between developmental chromosomal instability, intercellural/intertissular genome diversity and human brain diseases. Public Library of Science 2007-06-27 /pmc/articles/PMC1891435/ /pubmed/17593959 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000558 Text en Yurov et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yurov, Yuri B.
Iourov, Ivan Y.
Vorsanova, Svetlana G.
Liehr, Thomas
Kolotii, Alexei D.
Kutsev, Sergei I.
Pellestor, Franck
Beresheva, Alfia K.
Demidova, Irina A.
Kravets, Viktor S.
Monakhov, Viktor V.
Soloviev, Ilia V.
Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain
title Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain
title_full Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain
title_fullStr Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain
title_full_unstemmed Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain
title_short Aneuploidy and Confined Chromosomal Mosaicism in the Developing Human Brain
title_sort aneuploidy and confined chromosomal mosaicism in the developing human brain
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1891435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17593959
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000558
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