Cases of autosomal trisomy and trisomy mosaicism among liveborn infants are reviewed, and a second case of chromosome 3 trisomy mosaicism is described. The occurrence of autosomal trisomy for a particular chromosome is in general negatively correlated with the number of genes which have been localized to that chromosome. It is also positively related to the Q-brightness of the chromosome, which reflects its content of intercalary heterochromatin. Furthermore there are significantly fewer autosomal trisomics for chromosomes which contain hot spots for mitotic chiasmata in Bloom syndrome (chromosomes 1, 3, 6, 11, 12, 17, 19, and 22), compared with similar-sized control chromosomes 2, 4, 7, 9, 10, 18, 20, and 21. This is interpreted as further evidence for the gene richness of the hot spots which, being active, are extended in interphase and are therefore available for mitotic crossing over. The gene richness of these short Q-dark regions is also borne out by the scarcity of trisomic abortions for the chromosomes involved (the embryo dies before the abortion is recognized) and by the higher number of genes localized to these chromosomes compared with the control chromosomes.
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