Monosomy
Monosomy is a form of aneuploidy with the presence of only one chromosome from a pair.[1] Partial monosomy occurs when a portion of one chromosome in a pair is missing.
Monosomy | |
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Specialty | Medical genetics |
Human monosomy
Human conditions due to monosomy:
- Turner syndrome – People with Turner syndrome typically have one X chromosome instead of the usual two sex chromosomes. Turner syndrome is the only full monosomy that is seen in humans — all other cases of full monosomy are lethal and the individual will not survive development.
- Cri du chat syndrome – (French for "cry of the cat" after the distinctive noise by affected persons' malformed larynx) a partial monosomy caused by a deletion of the end of the short arm of chromosome 5
- 1p36 deletion syndrome – a partial monosomy caused by a deletion at the end of the short arm of chromosome 1
gollark: See, on the one hand London has many Internets cheaply, but on the other you pay 100x as much for, say, housing.
gollark: Unfortunately, in the rest of the UK, there are very few Internets around.
gollark: Many, many Internets.
gollark: So, it's like 1 gigabit, but 10 times as much Internets, basically.
gollark: In London some places can get 10gbit fiber, somehow.
See also
References
- "CRC - Glossary M". Archived from the original on 2007-08-08. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
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